The “Return to Europe”: Intellectual Debates on the global place of Czechoslovakia in the Interwar period
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2016
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Taylor & Francis
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Lemmen, Sarah. «The ‘Return to Europe’: Intellectual Debates on the Global Place of Czechoslovakia in the Interwar Period». European Review of History: Revue Européenne d’histoire 23, n.o 4 (3 de julio de 2016): 610-22. https://doi.org/10.1080/13507486.2016.1182124.
Abstract
In the East Central European context, the phrase ‘return to Europe’ has been used mainly in the period after 1989, referring to political, economic and social changes as well as mental relocations towards a ‘Western’ system. However, debates about the national whereabouts on a mental map – whether one was part of Eastern, Central or Western Europe – also abounded in the years following the founding of the nation-states after the First World War. Concentrating on Czech discourses on the national whereabouts both in a European and a global perspective in the years preceding and following the great upheaval of 1918, this article traces the changing Czech national identity, ranging from a self-perception as a ‘small nation’ in the Habsburg Empire to a European power with colonial ambitions after the foundation of the Czechoslovak republic, and finally to the acknowledgement in the 1930s that these ambitions could not be met. The study is based on sources ranging from Czech travelogues mainly to Africa and Asia, but also South America, to economic writings and colonial brochures, which offer a broad range of debates on the role and location of both the Czech nation and the Czechoslovak state both in Europe and the world.