NPD-NDP: Europe's New Nationalism in Germany and Austria
- 1 July 1968
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Review of Politics
- Vol. 30 (3) , 308-315
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0034670500040997
Abstract
Part of the Heritage bequeathed by the Habsburg Empire to the First and Second Austrian Republics was German ethnic nationalism. The movement was a response to what its adherents considered the difficulty of preserving German cultural practices and institutional patterns within a state composed of diverse nationalities. Challenged by the growth of nationalism among the other linguistic and ethnic groups of the Habsburg lands during the latter half of the nineteenth century and stimulated by the appearance of a German national state after 1871, Austro-Germanism grew in size and diversity until 1914. In its more moderate form, the persuasion went no further than stubborn resistance of German Austrians to any cultural or political concessions to non-Germans in the Empire. In the hands of the rabid Pan-Germanist Georg von Schonerer, it was a frankly subversive ideology dedicated to the detachment of the German sections of Austria from the Danubian monarchy and their fusion with imperial Germany.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Expulsion of the Germans from Hungary: A Study in Postwar DiplomacyThe Review of Politics, 1953
- Postwar Population Transfers in Europe: A SurveyThe Review of Politics, 1953