Romantic Nationalism in Eastern Europe: Russian, Polish, and Ukrainian Political Imaginations

Romantic Nationalism in Eastern Europe

Russian, Polish, and Ukrainian Political Imaginations

2012 • 306 pages

This book explores the political imagination of Eastern Europe in the 1830s and 1840s, when Polish, Russian, and Ukrainian intellectuals came to identify themselves as belonging to communities known as nations or nationalities. Bilenky approaches this topic from a transnational perspective, revealing the ways in which modern Russian, Polish, and Ukrainian nationalities were formed and refashioned through the challenges they presented to one another, both as neighboring communities and as minorities within a given community. Further, all three nations defined themselves as a result of their interactions with the Russian and Austrian empires. Fueled by the Romantic search for national roots, they developed a number of separate yet often overlapping and inclusive senses of national identity, thereby producing myriad versions of Russianness, Polishness, and Ukrainianness.

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4 released books

Stanford Studies on Central and Eastern Europe

Stanford Studies on Central and Eastern Europe is a 4-book series first released in 2009 with contributions by Holly Case, Serhiy Bilenky, and Dominique Reill.

Between States: The Transylvanian Question and the European Idea during World War II
Romantic Nationalism in Eastern Europe: Russian, Polish, and Ukrainian Political Imaginations
Nationalists Who Feared the Nation
Genocide in the Carpathians: War, Social Breakdown, and Mass Violence, 1914-1945

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