ABSTRACT

This volume addresses the question of ‘identity’ in East-Central Europe. It engages with a specific definition of ‘sub-cultures’ over the period from c. 1900 to the present and proposes novel ways in which the term can be used with the purpose of understanding identities that do not conform to the fixed, standard categories imposed from the top down, such as ‘ethnic group’, ‘majority’ or ‘minority’. Instead, a ‘sub-culture’ is an identity that sits between these categories. It may blend languages, e.g. dialect forms, cultural practices, ethnic and social identifications, or religious affiliations as well as concepts of race and biology that, similarly, sit outside national projects.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|25 pages

Hybrid identity into ethnic nationalism

Aromanians in Romania during the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth century

chapter 3|22 pages

Minority femininity at intersections

Hungarian women’s movements in interwar Transylvania

chapter 4|18 pages

The memory of a hurt identity

Bucharest’s Jewish sub-culture between fiction and non-fiction

chapter 5|20 pages

The Moldavian Csangos as sub-culture

A case study in ethnic, linguistic, and cultural hybridity

chapter 6|18 pages

Nazi divisions

A Romanian-German ‘historians’ dispute’ at the end of the Cold War

chapter 9|15 pages

The past that never passes and the future that never comes

‘Palimpsestual’ identity in Oleksandr Dovzhenko’s diaries

chapter 11|21 pages

A war experience in a bilingual border region

The case of the Memel Territory

chapter 12|21 pages

(Mis)matching linguistic, geographical and ethnic identities

The case of the East Frisians

chapter 13|16 pages

Ethnic identity in other nations’ conflicts

Defining Frisianness in the 1920s 1