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OverviewNationalizing a Borderland enriches understanding of ethnic conflict by examining the factors in the Austro-Hungarian province of Galicia between 1914 and 1920 that led to the rise of xenophobic nationalism and to the ethnocide of World War II. From Russian, Polish, Ukrainian, and Austrian archival sources, Prusin argues that while the violence inflicted upon Jews during that period may at first seem irrational and indiscriminate, a closer examination reveals that it was generated by traditional negative views of Jews and by the security concerns of the Russian and Polish militaries in the front zone. This violence, Prusin contends, served as a means of reshaping the socio-economic and political space of the province by diminishing Jewish cultural and economic influence. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Alexander Victor PrusinPublisher: The University of Alabama Press Imprint: The University of Alabama Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.335kg ISBN: 9780817358884ISBN 10: 0817358889 Pages: 200 Publication Date: 30 December 2016 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviews"“While a regional study, [Nationalizing a Borderland] is all the more important for locating the intersection between war, ethnicity, imperial collapse—and one should add collective psychic disturbance—in the creation of nation-states and the degree to which such a combination may have entirely fatal consequences for ethno-religious communities most marginal to the struggle.” —Nations and Nationalism “Prusin has produced a well-researched monograph that should be consulted by students of the Great War, twentieth-century ethnic cleansing, and Christian-Jewish relations in Eastern Europe.” —American Historical Review ""The author explores the 'dynamics of persecution' of Galician Jewry (a very sizeable community) from the side of the Russian Empire and the emergent independent Polish state. He demonstrates that there was an interesting symmetry between their attitudes, both coming to see the Jews as a universal and lethal threat to their national interests."" —John Klier, author of Imperial Russia's Jewish Question, 1855-1881 ""Nationalizing a Borderland is a fascinating, if harrowing case study. Making intensive use of primary and secondary sources, including the national archives of Poland and Ukraine, Prusin focuses his attention on a particular place and time – Galicia between 1914 and 1920 – in order to explore how empires fall and nation-states arise from their ashes. — Jildy Sauce" While a regional study, [Nationalizing a Borderland] is all the more important for locating the intersection between war, ethnicity, imperial collapse-and one should add collective psychic disturbance-in the creation of nation-states and the degree to which such a combination may have entirely fatal consequences for ethno-religious communities most marginal to the struggle. -Nations and Nationalism Prusin has produced a well-researched monograph that should be consulted by students of the Great War, twentieth-century ethnic cleansing, and Christian-Jewish relations in Eastern Europe. -American Historical Review| The author explores the 'dynamics of persecution' of Galician Jewry (a very sizeable community) from the side of the Russian Empire and the emergent independent Polish state. He demonstrates that there was an interesting symmetry between their attitudes, both coming to see the Jews as a universal and lethal threat to their national interests. -John Klier, author of Imperial Russia's Jewish Question, 1855-1881 While a regional study, [Nationalizing a Borderland] is all the more important for locating the intersection between war, ethnicity, imperial collapse-and one should add collective psychic disturbance-in the creation of nation-states and the degree to which such a combination may have entirely fatal consequences for ethno-religious communities most marginal to the struggle. -Nations and Nationalism Prusin has produced a well-researched monograph that should be consulted by students of the Great War, twentieth-century ethnic cleansing, and Christian-Jewish relations in Eastern Europe. -American Historical Review| The author explores the 'dynamics of persecution' of Galician Jewry (a very sizeable community) from the side of the Russian Empire and the emergent independent Polish state. He demonstrates that there was an interesting symmetry between their attitudes, both coming to see the Jews as a universal and lethal threat to their national interests. -John Klier, author of Imperial Russia's Jewish Question, 1855-1881 Nationalizing a Borderland is a fascinating, if harrowing case study. Making intensive use of primary and secondary sources, including the national archives of Poland and Ukraine, Prusin focuses his attention on a particular place and time - Galicia between 1914 and 1920 - in order to explore how empires fall and nation-states arise from their ashes. - Jildy Sauce Author InformationAlexander Victor Prusin is a professor of history at the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology and the author of The “Land Between”: Conflict in the East European Borderlands 1870-1992. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |