hungarian studies

new publication explores post-world war i austrian burgenland

assistant professor steven jobbitt’s latest publication explores the role that geographical knowledge production played in the post-world war i “discovery” of austrian burgenland. co-written with ferenc jankó of the university of west-hungary, sopron, "making burgenland from western hungary: geography and the politics of identity in interwar austria" appears in the current issue of hungarian cultural studies.

abstract: this study explores the role that geographical knowledge production played in the post-world war i “discovery” of austrian burgenland, focusing in particular on the relationship between geographical discourse and the politics of identity formation in the 1920s and 1930s. the primary task is to offer insight into this knowledge-making process by highlighting the discursive strategies employed in a variety of scholarly and popular texts, and by shedding critical light on the various actors and epistemic communities responsible for the imagining of burgenland from its annexation to austria in 1921 to the dissolution of the region and its subsequent re-invention as a greater german border zone after the nazi anschluss of 1938. as jankó and jobbitt argue, burgenland’s discovery between the wars was both figurative and literal. whether the “discoverers” were austrian or german, national or local, burgenland was as much a discursive concept as it was a physical reality. its emergent identity as a region, therefore, much like its actual borders, was fluid and often contested.

reference: ferenc jankó and steven jobbitt. "making burgenland from western hungary: geography and the politics of identity in interwar austria." hungarian cultural studies 10 (2017): 14-40. doi: 10.5195/ahea.2017.313

prominent role of department members at 2015 congress

5 september 2014 - thunder bay & orillia

drs. steven jobbitt and ronald harpelle are the lead organizers for two different meetings of scholarly associations this upcoming spring in ottawa.

dr. jobbitt is the organizer for the hungarian studies association of canada (hsac). established in 1985, the hsac is a multidisciplinary scholarly organization devoted to the study of hungary, hungarian society, culture, and history. it sponsors annual conferences, supports publications by members, and edits and publishes the internationally noted scholarly journal hungarian studies review.

dr. harpelle is the organizer for the the canadian association for the study of international development (casid). casid is a national, bilingual, interdisciplinary and pluralistic association devoted to the promotion of new knowledge in the broad field of international development. casid is a membership-based organization. it is the publisher of the international recognized canadian journal for development studies.

the annual congress of the humanities and social sciences is the convergence of over 70 scholarly associations, each holding their annual conference under one umbrella.  now in its 84th year, this flagship event brings together academics, researchers, policy-makers, and practitioners to share findings, refine ideas, and build partnerships that will help shape the canada of tomorrow. 

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