Kuvaus

In the aftermath of World War I, what used to be the Habsburg Empire split up into several nation states. But where to draw a border between the new Austrian Republic and the Hungarian nation state? In this episode, Leonid Motz (RECET) speaks with Hannes Grandits (HU Berlin) and Katharina Tyran (University of Helsinki) about their new edited volume The Disputed Austro-Hungarian Border: Agendas, Actors, and Practices in Western Hungary/Burgenland after World War I (with Ibolya Murber, published with Berghahn). They highlight how border-making was contested, negotiated, and experienced on the ground in one of the former Empire’s most multiethnic and multilingual regions—and what these debates reveal about nation‑state formation, identity, and transnational continuities in post‑1918 Central Europe.

Aikajakso21 syysk. 2025

Osallistuminen mediassa

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Osallistuminen mediassa

  • NimiTransformative Podcast Episode 70: The disputed Austro-Hungarian border
    Tunnustuksen arvoKansainvälinen
    Medianimi / kanavaRecet Transformative Podcasts
    MediatyyppiVerkko
    Maa/AlueItävalta
    Julkaisupäivämäärä21/09/2025
    KuvausIn the aftermath of World War I, what used to be the Habsburg Empire split up into several nation states. But where to draw a border between the new Austrian Republic and the Hungarian nation state? In this episode, Leonid Motz (RECET) speaks with Hannes Grandits (HU Berlin) and Katharina Tyran (University of Helsinki) about their new edited volume The Disputed Austro-Hungarian Border: Agendas, Actors, and Practices in Western Hungary/Burgenland after World War I (with Ibolya Murber, published with Berghahn). They highlight how border-making was contested, negotiated, and experienced on the ground in one of the former Empire’s most multiethnic and multilingual regions—and what these debates reveal about nation‑state formation, identity, and transnational continuities in post‑1918 Central Europe.
    URL-osoitehttps://www.recet.at/podcast/detail/episode-70-the-disputed-austro-hungarian-border
    HenkilötKatharina Klara Tyran