Beschreibung
From its emergence out of the ashes of World War II through to the economic and political challenges of today, Austria has embodied many of the contradictions of recent European history. Written by one of the nations leading historians, this account of postwar Austria explores the tensions that have defined it for over seven decades, whether in its overlapping policies of engagement and isolationism, its grandiose visions and persistent sense of inferiority, or its position as a model social democracy that has suffered recurrent bouts of xenophobic nationalism. This newly revised edition also addresses the major developments since 2005, including a resurgent far right, economic instability, and the potential fracturing of the European Union.
Autorenportrait
Oliver Rathkolb is Professor of Contemporary History at the University of Vienna. He was Schumpeter Fellow at the Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies at Harvard University and Visiting Professor at the University of Chicago and is member of the Academic Committee for the House of European History in Brussels.
Inhalt
Preface
Chapter 1. Austrian Identity: Between National Pride, Solipsism and European PatriotismChapter 2. Peculiarities of Austrian DemocracyChapter 3. Austria Can Beat Everything, If It Only Wants To: Myth and Reality of Austrian Economic Policy since 1945Chapter 4. Ten Chancellors, and Not One a WomanChapter 5. The Newspaper Tycoons of the Second RepublicChapter 6. Neutrality and the State Treaty in a New EuropeChapter 7. Alles Walzer...: The Politics of Art and Culture as the Early Second Republics Elixir of LifeChapter 8. The Austrian Model of the Welfare State and Intergenerational and Intergender Contracts since 1945Chapter 9. The Shadow of the PastChapter 10. Austrias Political Future: Some Trends
Bibliography Index
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