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Coeditare împreună cu Hartung-Gorre Verlag, Konstanz.
Volumul este finanţat de Primăria Municipiului Iaşi și reprezintă rezultatul colaborării academice dintre Centrul de Istorie a Relațiilor Internaționale (CIRI) și Laboratorul de Cercetări Istorice și Prosopografice ale Elitei Românești (CIPER) de la Universitatea „Alexandru Ioan Cuza” din Iași.
«Our volume, published one year after the conference Old Cities, Former Capitals and the Nation-State Building in Europe (18th-20th centuries): regional and national identities, is an attempt to introduce into Romanian academic circles an approach that is relatively different from the dominant trend of recent decades: the historical blaming of the unitary national state (created in 1859, 1866, and 1918) for the nationalist identity project and political centralism, which allegedly overwhelmed regional identity and cultural heritage. Far from being a nationalist counter-project or a cosmetic rehabilitation of the unitary national state from a historical point of view, our volume emphasizes the encounters and compatibility between regional and national identity, from a comparative historical perspective.»
(Cristian Ploscaru, Cosmin Mihuţ, Mihai-Bogdan Atanasiu)
Colecția Istorie modernă și memorie culturală, coordonată de conf. univ. dr. Gabriel Leanca și prof. univ. dr. Cristian Ploscaru, își propune să valorizeze contribuții de istorie culturală, politică și a relațiilor internaționale din epoca modernă (a doua jumătate a secolului al XVIII-lea – sfârșitul Primului Război Mondial): studii înnoitoare sub aspect metodologic și documentar, cercetări aplicate și comparate, lucrări de sinteză și de analiză istoriografică, ediții critice de memorii, însemnări, jurnale și corespondență din bogatul patrimoniu al ariei temporale menționate.
Introduction (Cristian Ploscaru, Cosmin Minuţ, Mihai-Bogdan Atanasiu)
Regionalism: Analytical Approaches
Xosé M. Núñez Seixas, Regionalism and Interwar Fascism
(1919-1945): Some Notes for a Discussion
Sorin Paliga, The Terminology of the Urban v. Rural Organisation, and
its Reflections in Romanian
Moving Cities: Urban Culture and Community Identity in Change
Radu Mârza, From Kolozsvár to Cluj, from Pozsony and Pressburg to
Bratislava on Postcards (After 1918)
Tatiana Scurtu, Voyageurs roumains et étrangers visitant les bains de
Vâlcele à partir de trois sièges au XIXe siècle
Edmond Malaj, The City of Shkodra and its Importance for the Albanian
Economy, Education, and National Culture in the 19th Century
Yanna Dimitriou, Reading Associations in 19th Century Corfu: Shaping
Identities Between Cosmopolitanism and Nationalism
Mircea-Cristian Ghenghea, Plagiarism and University Life in Romania
at the End of the 19th Century: Two Cases from the University of Iaşi
Tatsiana Varabei, ‘Styl kościoła i ołtarzy tak zwykły u nas w
kraju…’: Multicultural Perspectives on the Baroque Architecture of
the former Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the Early 20th Century
Sebastian-Dragoș Bunghez, Maria Alexandra Pantea, Wilsonian Ideas
Debated in Arad, the Political Capital of the Great Union of 1918
Jérémy Floutier, La représentation des villes transylvaines dans les
manuels scolaires hongrois de 1920 à 1989
Zornitsa Draganova, Veliko Tarnovo: Identity Narratives and
Community Building Before and After 1989
Historical Identity and Culture in National Context
Cosmin Mihuț, Provincial Mores versus National Ideals: Foreign
Perspectives on the Moldavian Elite (1856-1862)
Cristian Ploscaru, Mihai-Bogdan Atanasiu, Parochialism, Local Power
and Identity in Moldavia in the Mid-19th Century: Preliminary
Remarks
Alexandru Daneș, Nation and Nationalism in Romanian Territorial
Heraldry (1859-1989)
Gheorghe Negru, La peur du “danger roumain” comme pretexte pour
intensifier la russification en Bessarabie (seconde moitié du XIXè
siècle)
Lucian Turcu, Rebuilding the Pantheon after the Great Union: The
Celebration of the Centenary of Avram Iancu’s Birth (1924)
Joel Sidler, Víctor Ramiro Fernández, State Formation and Local
Development in Argentina. Theoretical Dialogues from the
Periphery
Dramatic Past, Uncertain Future: Building Identities in Wartime
Mădălin Anghel, Local Revolt or National Uprising? Interpreting the
Events in Iaşi in the Spring of 1848 through Great Power Consular
Reports
Mihai Tudosă, Boosting Morale in the Nation’s Darkest Hour. The
Newspaper ‘România, organ al apărării naționale’, Iași, 1917-1918
Elena Negru, L’Union soviétique comme ‘machine’ pour la fabrication
des nations. Le projet stalinien d’ingénierie ethnoculturelle en
RSS Moldave (1940-1941, 1944-1953)
Blagoj Conev, Nationalism as a Factor for the Dissolution of
Yugoslavia and the Western Concept of Nation-State
Anatolie Bajora, The Emergence and Development of the National
Movement of the Gagauz in the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic
(1988-1991)
Cristian Ploscaru is PhD Professor of Modern History at the Faculty of History, Alexandru Ioan Cuza University in Iași, Romania. He specializes in modern history, the history of political ideas and practices, and social identities and networks. In 2022, he published the book Politică, reformă și interogații identitare în Moldova (1822-1832) [Politics, reform, and identity challenges in Moldavia], Alexandru Ioan Cuza University Publishing House.
Cosmin Mihuţ is Lecturer of Modern History at Faculty of History, Alexandru Ioan Cuza University in Iași, Romania. His fields of interest include the history of politics, with a particular focus on the study of discursive practices and representations, forms of legitimacy, and the symbolic exercise of power, examining the groups and power structures active in the first half of the 19th century. In 2023, he published the book Politică şi discurs naţional în vremea domniei lui Alexandru D. Ghica (1834-1842) [Politics and National Discourse during the Reign of Alexandru D. Ghica (1834-1842)] , Alexandru Ioan Cuza University Publishing House.
Mihai-Bogdan Atanasiu is Senior Researcher, director of the Department of Social Sciences and Humanities, Institute of Interdisciplinary Research, “Alexandru Ioan Cuza” University of Iaşi. He has a PhD in History, awarded in 2012 at the same university. His research activity focuses on the political, social and cultural history of Moldavia in the seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Most of his scholarly contributions have focused on social history, genealogy, prosopography, history of the Church, history of mentalities, as well as on editing documentary sources.