Show simple item record

FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorSluga, Glenda
dc.date.accessioned2021-07-09T00:53:42Z
dc.date.available2021-07-09T00:53:42Z
dc.date.issued2022en_AU
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2123/25671
dc.description.abstractIn 1945, when Karl Polanyi was in London typing up his lecture notes on Nationalism and Internationalism, the Geneva-based League of Nations, perhaps the most extraordinary institution that had yet appeared in human history, was all but dead, without funeral and without fanfare, and a new international organization, and the foundations for the United Nations Organizaton were being laid on the other side of the world. Polanyi had already lived through through the great transformations of twentieth century international politics. His birth in 1886 in Vienna to a Jewish bourgeois family—his father was a railway entrepreneur, whose real name Pollacsek spoke to the diverse Habsburg origins—coincided with the international turn of the 1880s and 1890s. As we will see, in the Austrian empire as well as Europe’s other empires, bourgeois and aristocratic contemporaries were likely to identify with a ‘new internationalism’—the characteristics of which were a faith in international law, arbitration, and governance, as the means of a permanent peace.en_AU
dc.language.isoenen_AU
dc.publisherOxford University Pressen_AU
dc.relation.ispartofRemaking Central Europe: The League of Nations and the Former Habsburg Lands, edited by Peter Becker and Natasha Wheatleyen_AU
dc.rightsCreative Commons Attribution 4.0en_AU
dc.subjectLeague of Nationsen_AU
dc.subjectGlobal Austriaen_AU
dc.title'Global Austria' and the League of Nations: Reframing Empire and Internationalismen_AU
dc.typeBook chapteren_AU
dc.subject.asrc2103 Historical Studiesen_AU
dc.relation.arcFL130100174
dc.rights.otherThis is an Accepted Manuscript of a chapter that has been accepted for publication by Oxford University Press in the forthcoming book Remaking Central Europe: The League of Nations and the Former Habsburg Lands, edited by Peter Becker and Natasha Wheatley due for publication in 2022.en_AU
usyd.facultySeS faculties schools::Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences::School of Philosophical and Historical Inquiryen_AU
usyd.departmentDepartment of Historyen_AU
workflow.metadata.onlyNoen_AU


Show simple item record

Associated file/s

Associated collections

Show simple item record

There are no previous versions of the item available.