Peter Haslinger

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Peter Haslinger, 2015

Peter Haslinger (born April 15, 1964 in Innsbruck ) is an Austrian historian of Eastern Europe .

Life

Peter Haslinger studied history, Slavic studies, Japanese studies and Finno-Ugric studies in Vienna and Budapest. From 1990 to 1995 he was a research assistant at the Institute for Eastern European History at the University of Vienna. He received his doctorate in 1993 on the subject of Hungarian revisionism and Burgenland 1922-1932 . He was head of the Budapest branch of the Austrian Institute for East and Southeastern Europe in 1996/97, after which he worked as a research assistant in the Collaborative Research Center 541 “Identities and Alterities” at the University of Freiburg and from 2001 to 2007 at the Collegium Carolinum in Munich. After visiting professorships in Vienna and Salzburg, 2006 saw the publication of Imagined Territories. Nation and Territory in the Czech Political Discourse 1889-1938 Habilitation in Freiburg. In 2006 and 2007 he held a substitute professorship in Munich and Regensburg. Since 2007 he has been director of the Herder Institute in Marburg and at the same time professor for the history of East Central Europe at the Justus Liebig University in Giessen.

Haslinger's research focuses on the history of East Central Europe since 1848, forced migration, flight and expulsion, minority issues, research on nationalism and regionalism, culture of remembrance, museumization, history politics, security and violence research, spatial turn and the history of cartography, as well as the history of discourse and the history of knowledge communication.

Committees and memberships (selection)

  • since 2007 member of the board of directors at the "Giessen Center for Eastern Europe" (GiZo)
  • since 2017 member of the Scientific Advisory Board of the Federal Institute for Culture and History of Germans in Eastern Europe
  • since 2013 member of the Scientific Advisory Board of the Graduate School for East and South East European Studies at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich and the University of Regensburg

Awards

  • 2012: Award of the jubilee medal on the occasion of the 200th anniversary of the University of Wrocław
  • 1996: Stephan László Prize for the monograph Hundred Years of Neighborhood. Relations between Austria and Hungary 1895–1994

Fonts (selection)

  • together with Mathias Voigtmann, Wojciech Pieniazek and Vytautas Petronis: Frontiers of Violence. Paramilitaries as violent communities in East Central Europe in the 1920s, in: Winfried Speitkamp (Ed.): Violent communities in history. Origin, cohesive force and decay, Göttingen 2017, pp. 233–254.
  • together with Monika Wingender, Kamil Galiullin and Iskander Gilyazov (eds.): Multilingualism and multiculturalism in phases of political upheaval in Eastern Europe, Wiesbaden 2016 (Interdisciplinary Studies on Eastern Europe Series of the Gießen Center for Eastern Europe 2).
  • together with Justyna Aniceta Turkowska and Alexandra Schweiger (eds.): Knowledge transnational. Functions - Practices - Representations. Marburg 2016.
  • together with Heidrun Kämper , Thomas Raithel (Hrsg.): Democracy history as a caesura history. Discourses of the Early Weimar Republic. Berlin 2014.
  • Nation and Territory in the Czech Political Discourse 1880–1938. Munich 2010, ISBN 978-3-486-59148-4 . (Publications of the Collegium Carolinum 117) [Habilitation thesis]
  • A hundred years of neighborhood. Relations between Austria and Hungary 1895–1994. Frankfurt a. Main u. a. 1996, ISBN 3-631-48951-X . (Awarded the Stefan László Prize 1996)
  • Hungarian revisionism and Burgenland 1922–1932. Frankfurt a. Main u. a. 1994, ISBN 3-631-47627-2 . (European University Theses, Series III, 616) [Dissertation]
  • Arad, November 1918. Oszkár Jászi and the Romanians in Hungary 1900–1918. Vienna / Cologne / Weimar 1993, ISBN 3-205-98049-2 . (To the customer of Southeast Europe 2.19)

Web links

Commons : Peter Haslinger  - Collection of images, videos and audio files