Опис: |
Markian Prokopovych. Habsburg Lemberg : architecture, public space, and politics in the Galician capital, 1772-1914. (Central European Studies.) - West Lafayette: Purdue University Press, 2009. - 357 pp.
Habsburg Lemberg: Architecture, Public Space, and Politics in the Galician Capital, 1772–1914 reveals that behind a variety of national and positivist historical narratives of Lemberg and of its architecture, there always existed a city that was labeled cosmopolitan yet provincial; and a Vienna, but still of the East. Buildings, streets, parks, and monuments became part and parcel of a complex set of culturally driven politics. |
Зміст: |
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Contents
Acknowledgments xiii
Foreword xv
Introduction: The Other Lemberg 1
Chapter One: Architecture, Public Space, and Politics Revisited
Vormärz to Fin de Siècle: Disorder, Cultural Politics, Beautification
Vormärz: Verschönerungsplan and Its Restrictions
Neoabsolutism: Disorder and Representation
Fin de Siècle: Upiększenie, Renaming, and Memorializing
Imperial Loyalty and Nationalism: Convergence versus Divergence 37
Vormärz: Taming Polish Nationalism?
Neoabsolutism to Autonomy: Parteien into Nations and the Survival of Habsburg Loyalty
Public Space, Nationalism, Construction
The Official Concept of Public Space
Public Representation and Segregated Socializing: Vormärz to Constitutionalism
Chapter Two: Writing the City: Bureaucrats, Historians, Technicians, and Nationals
Bureaucrats and Reason: Franz Kratter, Joseph Rohrer, and the Polish Context
Vormärz, Architects: Ignac Chambrez between Vienna and Prague
Bureaucrats and Nationalism
Agenor Gołuchowski
Edmund Mochnacki and Tadeusz Rutowski
Poles: Historicism, Historians, and “Technicians”
Ruthenians: Russophiles, Ukrainians, and “Germanized Individuals”
Gentiles and Places of Filth and Stench
Fin de Siècle, Architects: Julian Zachariewicz and Artistic Civilizations
Chapter Three: Making the City: Institutions, Parks, Monuments
Institutions: Vaterland, Nation, and the Arts
Ossolineum, vaterländisch-literarische Institut
Skarbek Theater, “Der allgemein genüssende Wunsch”
The Ruthenian National Institute, One’s Own Truth in One’s Own House
Town Hall, “Edelstein im schönen Ringe” Parks: From Places of Solitude into Memorialized Spaces
Kiliński Park and the Resistance of Political Power
Memorializing Agenor Gołuchowski
Monuments on the Street: Imperial Symbolism and Aspirations Unfulfilled
Failing with Tadeusz Kościuszko
Chapter Four: Using the City: Commemorations, Restorations, Exhibitions
Dynastic Ceremonies, Imperial Pomp, and National Celebrations
The Spectacles of 1809
Król Kurkowy and the Transformation of the Riflemen Confraternity
The Lublin Union Mound in 1869, 1871, and 1874 and the Later Construction
The City and the Ruthenians, 1905
Nationalizing Restoration and Westernizing the Past
Vienna and the Honorary Curators
Laymen, Technicians, and the Invention of Wawel’s Past
The City, the Municipal Archive, and the External Advisers
Westernizing Medieval Churches: Julian Zachariewicz
Polonizing the Armenian Cathedral Landesausstellungen: Technological and National Display
1877: The Exhibition of Agriculture and Industry and the Emergence of Technicians
1894 and the Third Congress of Polish Technicians
1910: Polish Art and Polish Technicians
Conclusions
Abbreviations
Bibliography
Index
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