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Three Score and Fifteen Years of Habsburg and Austrian Historiography and a Quarter-Century of Editing the Austrian History Yearbook
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 February 2009
Extract
Certain events sometimes exert a decisive influence on the future direction of a person's life. In my case one of the more determinative occurred during a brief week spent in Vienna in early February 1957 For one thing, I discovered in the Haus-, Hof- und Staatsarchiv highly significant documents in some cartons that had just been returned to Austria from Italy, by mistake as it turned out. The director of the Austrian archives, Gebhard Rath, put these records at my disposal. These papers, together with material of lesser import in the Archivio di Stato in Milan, provided the documentation for an article showing how Austrian officials had thwarted the efforts of an Italian scoundrel to extort money from them. More important than this discovery were my conversations with Professor Hugo Hantsch, of the University of Vienna, during the course of which I promised to supply as complete a list as possible of United States and Canadian writings on the history of the Habsburg monarchy, take the initiative in founding some kind of association for American scholars interested in Habsburg and Austrian history, and endeavor to help the Austrian professor obtain a grant from the Ford Foundation for a large international project on the history of the Habsburg monarchy from 1848 to 1918.
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References
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21 Published in New York by Macmillan in 1929.
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24 The other key expert, Paul W. Schroeder, of the University of Illinois, pursued his doctoral studies at the University of Texas.
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28 The first two editors of the Austrian History Yearbook learned about the intricacies involved in editing a journal devoted to multinational central Europe while serving as associate editors of this publication.
29 For an analysis of the articles published in the Journal of Central European Affairs, see Adams, Meredith Lentz, “The Habsburg Monarchy, Austria and Hungary as Treated in the Journal of Central European Affairs,” Austrian History News Letter, No. 3 (1962), pp. 32–54Google Scholar. For a similar analysis of the articles in other journals, see Hoover, Arlie, “The Habsburg Monarchy, Austria and Hungary as Treated in Other U.S. Journals than the Journal of Central European AffairsGoogle Scholar, ibid., No. 4 (1963), pp. 51–72.
30 Among these publications, see Barány, George, Stephen Széchenyi and the Awakening of Hungarian Nationalism, 1791–1841 (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1968)Google Scholar; Bernard, Paul P., The Origins of Josephinism: Two Studies (Colorado Springs, CO: Colorado College Press, 1964)Google Scholar; Bernard, , Joseph II (New York: Twayne Publishers, 1968)Google Scholar; Bernard, , Jesuits and Jacobins, Enlightenment and Despotism in Austria (Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 1971)Google Scholar; Bernard, , Joseph II and Bavaria: Two Eighteenth Century Attempts at German Unification (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1965)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Bernard, , The Limits of Enlightenment: Joseph II and the Law (Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 1979)Google Scholar; Pech, Stanley Z., The Czech Revolution of 1848 (Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 1969)Google Scholar; and Wright, William E., Serf, Seigneur, and Sovereign: Agrarian Reform in Eighteenth-Century Bohemia (Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 1966).Google Scholar
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33 For an evaluation of his work and influence, see Kann, Robert A.'s “Arthur J. May, 1899–1968,” Austrian History Yearbook, Vol. III (1967), Pt. 3, pp. 324–326CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and the comments by R. J. R. in his brief note entitled “Two Distinguished Pioneer Scholars,” in ibid., pp. 327–328.
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37 Engel-Janosi, , … aber ein stolzer Bettler, p. 217.Google Scholar
38 The Growth of German Historicism (Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1944)Google Scholar; and Four Studies in French Romantic Historical Writing (Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1955).Google Scholar
39 See Austrian History Yearbook, Vol. I (1965), pp. 189 and 201.Google Scholar
40 For an evaluation of Robert A. Kann's work as a historian, see Winters, Stanley B., “The Forging of a Historian: Robert A. Kann in America, 1939–1976,”Google Scholaribid., Vol. XVII–XVIII (1981–1982), pp. 3–24; and Stourzh, Gerald, “Robert A. Kann—a Memoir from Austria,”Google Scholaribid., pp. 24–25.
41 But not the best one ever appearing in English. In my opinion, the best is French historian Tapié, Victor L.'s The Rise and Fall of the Habsburg Monarchy, translated by Hardman, Stephen (New York: Praeger, 1971).Google Scholar
42 For a complete list, see the sections entitled “United States Publications on Austrian History,” in Vols. I, II, and IV–VGoogle Scholar to and including XIX–XX of the Austrian History Yearbook.
43 See Stourzh, Gerald, “Hugo Hantsch,”Google Scholaribid., Vol. IX–X (1973–1974), pp. 507–513.
44 See Stourzh, Gerald, “Heinrich Benedikt (1886–1981),”Google Scholaribid., Vol. XVII–XVIII (1981–1982), pp. 579–580.
45 See Wagner, Hans, “Alphons Lhotsky,”Google Scholaribid., Vol. VI–VII (1970–1971), pp. 515–520.
46 For European studies on Austrian history before 1966, see Fellner, Fritz and Gottas, Friedrich, “Habsburg Studies in Europe,”Google Scholaribid., Vol. III (1967), Pt. 3, pp. 296–307.
47 “Recent French Publications on the Habsburg Empire and the Succession States (1952–1962),” ibid., Vol. I (1965), pp. 164–178.
48 Fellner, and Gottas, , “Habsburg Studies in Europe,” pp. 298–303.Google Scholar
49 Die Nationalitäten in “Cisleithanien” und das Wahlrecht der Märzrevolution 1848–49 (Graz: Böhlau, 1962).Google Scholar
50 Die Sozialdemokratie und die Nationalitätenfrage im habsburgischen Vielvölkerstaat, Vol. I: Das Ringen um die supranationale Integration der Zisleithanischen Arbeiterbewegung (1867–1907) (Vienna: Europa Verlag, 1963).Google Scholar
51 A11 four issues were subsequently reprinted in their original mimeographed form by Johnson Reprint Corporation of New York.
52 The name of the man so dedicated to furthering the cause of scholarship should be revealed, even though it is now 28 years after the deed was performed. He is Myron J. Low, now a member of the history department faculty at Austin College, in Sherman, Texas.
53 , R. J. R., “Obiter Dictum,” pp. 2–3Google Scholar. The above list was published in the Austrian History Yearbook, Vol. I (1965), pp. 179–225.Google Scholar
54 For the organizational structure of the symposium, see Jelavich, Charles and , R. J. R., “The Conference,”Google Scholaribid., Vol. III (1967), Pt. 1, pp. 1–7.
55 Although I feel that very rigid limits need to be set and strictly adhered to in regard to exactly what fields should be included and excluded, within such limits the list must be as complete as possible if it is to be of any real value to the profession as a whole.
56 This frequently necessitated making considerable changes in sentence structure in German manuscripts. Just one example: A dozen years ago when I sent my five-page translation of a book review to its Austrian author for careful checking, the latter gave the translation his approval but at the same time sent a personal translation that he believed might possibly convey his ideas more exactly. His translation had a total of only four sentences, each of which had at least a score of misplaced modifiers. Needless to say, my version was published.
57 It is extremely difficult to make more than a rough estimate for the years 1983–1985, since numerous books and articles in much wider areas were now included in the Yearbook lists. Moreover, while I had strictly excluded all non-American authors from the United States and Canadian lists, since 1982 a substantial number of publications by foreign authors were listed.
58 In all the issues, including Vol. XXI (1985).
59 For the reasons given in note 57, the figure cited for 1985 is only a rough estimate.
60 Carl Schorske, who received a Harvard Ph.D. in 1950, is not included since his thesis was in German history.
61 Chicago, Michigan, Duke, Wisconsin, American, St. John's, U.C.L.A., Rice, Johns Hopkins, Cornell, Boston, Washington, Marquette, Western Reserve, Catholic University, Vanderbilt, and Boston College.
62 Brown, Bryn Mawr, Catholic University, Duke, Kent State, Mississippi State, Nebraska, Texas Christian, and Virginia.
63 University of Arizona, Boston College, the University of California at Santa Barbara, the University of California at Riverside, Carnegie-Mellon, Case Western Reserve, Chicago Theological Seminary, the College of the City of New York, the University of Denver, Dropsie College, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Florida State, Fordham, George Washington, Georgia, the University of Illinois at Chicago Circle, Johns Hopkins, Kentucky, Louisiana State, Loyola, Marquette, Michigan State, State University of New York at Albany, State University of New York at Binghamton, State University of New York at Buffalo, Northern Illinois, Pennsylvania State, Pittsburgh, St. John's, St. Louis University, South Carolina, Syracuse, Texas, Tufts, Tulane, and Vanderbilt.
64 Twenty-seven if István Déak is included. He was not listed among the Columbia students with publications in the field because his dissertation was in German history.
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