Narrated Empires: Perceptions of Late Habsburg and Ottoman Multinationalism
In: Modernity, Memory and Identity in South-East Europe
Part I Introduction -- 1. Narrating Empires: Between National and Multinational Visions of Belonging -- 2. Making Sense in a World That is Falling Apart: Imperial Narratives of State, Diversity, and Modernity -- Part II Ottomanism Revisited: An Imperial Narrative of Many Voices -- 3. Ottomanism and Varieties of Official Nationalism -- 4. Ottomanism in History and Historiography: Fortunes of a Concept -- 5. Unruly Children of the Homeland: Ottomanism's Non-Muslim Authors -- 6. Arab Perspectives on the Late Ottoman Empire -- Part III Empires of Diversity and States of Change: Nations and Identities Between Centers and Frontiers -- 7. Zrinski-Myths: A Vehicle for Imperial and National Narratives -- 8. Ottoman Reform, Non-Muslim Subjects, and Constitutive Legislation: The Reform Edict of 1856 and the Greek General Regulations of 1862 -- 9. Ottoman Albanians in an Era of Transition: An Engagement with a Fluid Modern World -- 10. Unraveling Multinational Legacies: National Affiliations of Government Employees in Post-Habsburg Austria -- Part IV Habsburg Press(ure): Reading Between the Lines of A Many-Tongued Journalism -- 11. Pester Lloyd and the German-Speaking Upper Classes of Hungary: A Budapest Newspaper in the Context of Increasing Magyarization -- 12. A "Roman Affair:" A Croatian Priest College in the Habsburg Press Debate of 1901 -- 13. Narratives of Modernization in Periodicals: On the German-Language Agramer Tagblatt in 1918 -- Part V Echoes from an Inner Void: The Post-Imperial Novel Between Melancholy and Memory -- 14. Theory of Empire, Mythology and the Power of the Narrative -- 15. The Ottoman Myth in Turkish Literature -- 16. The Hotel as a Non-Place of Habsburg Multinationalism. Hotel Savoy (1924) by Joseph Roth -- Part VI Afterword -- 17. Remembering Empires: Between Civilizational Nationalism and Post-National Pluralism.