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Chapter 6 ♦ 241
at other German-language universities, but experience as a professor at a
provincial institution was almost a requirement for nomination as a professor
in Vienna or Prague, as shown in chapter 4. However, even in Vienna, the
atmosphere was increasingly tense after the late 1890s, and the growing
influence of German nationalist scholars and students led to anti-Semitic
street protests and, finally, street fights directly before World War I.141
Historians often mention that Jewish scholars had to wait longer for
professorships because Catholic faculties were promoting Catholics, bait-
ing Jewish Privatdozenten with titles and remunerations but hindering their
entrance into faculty positions, which would have bestowed the right to
vote on important academic matters. These career inequalities were what
the Viennese jurist and politician Josef Redlich meant in a widely discussed
speech from 1907.142 The statistics cited by Karl Lueger in 1907 to sub-
stantiate his claim that Cisleithanian universities were turning into Jewish
strongholds—that seven of the eight most recent appointees were Jewish—
concerned paid and unpaid associate professors,143 which Lueger neglected
to mention. This glass ceiling was most significant in Vienna and Prague;
the universities there, hesitating to appoint scholars from within and seeking
the best available scholars, tended to look outside their own walls. At the
same time, Jewish scholars were generally unwelcome at other universities,
which limited their appointment opportunities to universities where they had
the most competition, without having any real chance of proving themselves
as professors elsewhere. In other words, they had a double burden of work
outside the university to improve their financial stability and thus had fewer
chances for research and publications. Through this vertical glass ceiling
and the horizontal invisible ghetto wall, a large number of Viennese Jewish
Privatdozenten were left adrift, leading them to concentrate on other activ-
ities, such as Volkskurse (people’s courses) and semiprivate laboratories,
largely contributing to the paradigmatic image of a culturally and scholarly
flourishing Vienna in 1900.144
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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