Seite - 6 - in Universities in Imperial Austria, 1848–1918 - A Social History of a Multilingual Space
Bild der Seite - 6 -
Text der Seite - 6 -
6 ♦ Universities in Imperial Austria, 1848–1918
the Russian Empire, creating a sense of togetherness and state unity more
decisively than any legal measures could have.18 Recent work on higher
education in the United States and Britain has highlighted universities as
similarly unity-promoting institutions. In the nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries, universities, although rooted in local circumstances, remained
crucial parts of the unifying networks of education; norms and values were
transferred at the same rate as scholars.19 The tensions among the state/
empire, ephemeral transnational science, and local cultural, social, and re-
ligious contexts were obvious, but skillful mediation created a network of
institutions guided by the same norms, thus supporting the state that im-
posed them. As different as universities became, they were part of the project
of intellectual unification—e pluribus unum, to use the slogan of the time.
While hierarchies and hegemonies influence the production of space,
the spatial turn pays more attention to how people live in the space, ex-
ploring the possibilities offered by its contingency. This also means that
the center-periphery structure is socially constructed, even if it is perpet-
uated by politics and accumulated prestige.20 Works on the Spanish and
German university systems clearly show how certain universities became
centers, thereby influencing outcomes for the system as a whole.21 However,
while politics played an immense role, the structuring of academic space in
Continental Europe into universities of entrance, universities of promotion,
and final-station universities (Einstiegsuniversität, Promotionsuniversität,
and Endstationsuniversität), as German historian Marita Baumgarten has
named the different types of institutions, was a long-lasting process resulting
more from the accumulation of cultural capital than from academic policy
or financial issues.
The present work draws attention to another academic space: the univer-
sity system of the late Habsburg Empire, and more precisely its Cisleithanian
(“Austrian”) part.22 Not acknowledged as an empire sensu stricto, the area
enclosed by Habsburg imperial boundaries witnessed in the sixty years be-
tween the “Spring of Nations” in 1848 and the “War of Nations” in 1914–18
a nexus of concurrent imperialism and nationalism, or of centripetal and
centrifugal tendencies.23 At the same time, it had to accommodate differing
geographic projects, as stable “cultural nations” exceeded the monarchy’s
boundaries and became more and more bound to spaces defined by linguistic
affinities. The identity issue of being a loyal national and imperial subject (ei-
ther both or one or the other; the two were by no means mutually exclusive)
was experienced both collectively and individually through inscriptions in
zurück zum
Buch Universities in Imperial Austria, 1848–1918 - A Social History of a Multilingual Space"
Universities in Imperial Austria, 1848–1918
A Social History of a Multilingual Space
- Titel
- Universities in Imperial Austria, 1848–1918
- Untertitel
- A Social History of a Multilingual Space
- Autor
- Jan Surman
- Verlag
- Purdue University Press
- Ort
- West Lafayette
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- PD
- ISBN
- 978-1-55753-861-1
- Abmessungen
- 16.5 x 25.0 cm
- Seiten
- 474
- Schlagwörter
- History, Austria, Eduction System, Learning
- Kategorien
- Geschichte Vor 1918
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- List of Illustrations vi
- List of Tables vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Note on Language Use, Terminology, and Geography xi
- Abbreviations xiii
- Introduction A Biography of the Academic Space 1
- Chapter 1 Centralizing Science for the Empire 19
- Chapter 2 The Neoabsolutist Search for a Unified Space 49
- Chapterr 3 Living Out Academic Autonomy 89
- Chapter 4 German-Language Universities between Austrian and German Space 139
- Chapter 5 Habsburg Slavs and Their Spaces 175
- Chapter 6 Imperial Space and Its Identities 217
- Chapter 7 Habsburg Legacies 243
- Conclusion Paradoxes of the Central European Academic Space 267
- Appendix 1 Disciplines of Habilitation at Austrian Universities 281
- Appendix 2 Databases of Scholars at Cisleithanian Universities 285
- Notes 287
- Bibliography 383
- Index 445