CES: Beyond the Siege: Cultural Traffic between Austrians and Turks in the 20th Century

Date: 

Thursday, April 7, 2016, 4:15pm to 6:00pm

Location: 

Adolphus Busch Hall, Hoffmann Room

The 1683 Ottoman siege of Vienna has had a long and malleable cultural afterlife. Central Europeans have 're-written' the siege story in modern times to support Habsburg patriotism, Austrian republicanism, Polish nationalism of the nineteenth century, German nationalism of the twentieth, and post-1960 scares about Muslim immigration. This talk takes up one unexpected chapter in the story: In the 1920s, Turkey became a desired destination for unemployed Austrians. In job seekers’ accounts of their dreams and travails in “the Orient” we find a surprising reversal of the Gastarbeiter phenomenon.

Maureen Healy Associate Professor of History, Lewis & Clark College

Sponsors: New Directions in European History Study Group

Contact: Elizabeth Cross, ecross@fas.harvard.edu