Throughout the nineteenth and into the early decades of the twentieth century, it was common for rural and working-class parents in the Czech-German borderlands to ensure that their children were bilingual by sending them to live with families who spoke the "other" language. As nationalism became a more potent force in Central Europe, however, such practices troubled pro-German and pro-Czech activists, who feared that the children born to their nation could literally be "lost" or "kidnapped" from the national community through such experiences and, more generally, by parents who were either flexible about national belonging or altogether indifferent to it. Highlighting this indifference to nationalism—and concerns about such apathy among nationalists—Kidnapped Souls offers a surprising new perspective on Central European politics and society in the first half of the twentieth century. Drawing on Austrian, Czech, and German archives, Tara Zahra shows how nationalists in the Bohemian Lands worked to forge political cultures in which children belonged more rightfully to the national collective than to their parents. Through their educational and social activism to fix the boundaries of nation and family, Zahra finds, Czech and German nationalists reveal the set of beliefs they shared about children, family, democracy, minority rights, and the relationship between the individual and the collective. Zahra shows that by 1939 a vigorous tradition of Czech-German nationalist competition over children had created cultures that would shape the policies of the Nazi occupation and the Czech response to it. The book's concluding chapter weighs the prehistory and consequences of the postwar expulsion of German families from the Bohemian Lands. Kidnapped Souls is a significant contribution to our understanding of the genealogy of modern nationalism in Central Europe and a groundbreaking exploration of the ways in which children have been the objects of political contestation when national communities have sought to shape, or to reshape, their futures.
... souls is difficult because doctors never know where they might be ; often the doctors ' souls must travel great distances to locate the souls . The urgency with which doctors must recover kidnapped souls depends upon how dangerous the ...
As nasty as I knew Peter Terry to be, I never expected him to start kidnapping kids.
... Kidnapped Souls, 33–39. 76. Zahra, “Reclaiming Children for the Nation,” 511. 77. Zahra, Kidnapped Souls, 126–127. 78. Over three hundred cases on contested children in Moravia reached the Supreme Administrative Court in the interwar ...
... Kidnapped Souls, 13. 95 Compare Mommsen, Die Sozialdemokratie, 390–1, 393–5. 96 Pieter Judson, Guardians of the Nation: Activists on the Language Frontiers of Imperial Austria (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2006), 24. 97 See ...
LONDON'S SOUL IS MISSING.
Captain Scarlet McCray has a problem: her crew is bored.
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Peter Lang , 1995 ) , 12–13 ; Kindheit , ed . Pörtner , 188–198 ; Margret Kraul , Gymnasium und Gesellschaft im Vormärz ( Göttingen : Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht , 1980 ) , 101–111 , 120-122 ; Jakob Vogel , Nationen im Gleichschritt : Der ...
An intriguing study of a fluid cross-border area over several decades
Examining this geographically vast, multicultural region through a variety of methodological lenses, this volume offers informed and dispassionate analyses of how the many populations of these borderlands managed to coexist in a previous ...