European University Institute Library

Borderland studies meets child studies, a European encounter, Machteld Venken

Label
Borderland studies meets child studies, a European encounter, Machteld Venken
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Illustrations
mapsillustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Borderland studies meets child studies
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1007494486
Responsibility statement
Machteld Venken
Series statement
Warsaw studies in contemporary history,, volume 6, 2364-2874
Sub title
a European encounter
Summary
This book provides a comparative analysis of the history of borderland children during the 20th century. More than their parents, children were envisioned to play a crucial role in bringing about a peaceful Europe. The contributions show the complexity of nationalisation within various spheres of borderland children’s lives and display the dichotomy between nationalist policies and manifest non-national practices of borderland children. Despite the different imaginations of East and West that had influenced peace negotiators after both World Wars, moreover, borderland children in Western and Central Europe invented practices that contributed to the creation of a socially cohesive Europe. --, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
Acknowledgements -- Destitute children in Alsace from the beginning of the twentieth century to the end of the 1930s : orphan care in Strasbourg, in between France and Germany / Catherine Maurer, Gabrielle Ripplinger -- Childhood in the Memel Region / Ruth Leiserowitz -- Youth movements in Alsace and the issue of national identity, 1918-1970 / Julien Fuchs -- The everyday life of children in Polish-German borderland during the early postwar period / Beata Halicka -- "We remain what we are" : "Wir bleiben was wir sind" : North Schleswig German identities in children's education after 1945 / Tobias Haimin Wung-Sung -- Generational conflicts, the spirit of '68 and cultural emancipation in the German speaking community of Belgium : a historical essay about the '73 generation / Andreas Fickers -- Notes on contributors -- Index
Content
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