Interurban Knowledge Exchange in Southern and Eastern Europe, 1870–1950

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Austro Hungarian Dual Monarchy
Bohemian Capital
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Category=NHD
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Central Dispensary
comparative city development 1870-1950
Czech Architects
Deutsches Museum
East Central European Cities
Eastern European Cities
Eliel Saarinen
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Europe's Borderlands
Europe’s Borderlands
Generalitat De Catalunya
Historic Prague
Hungarian Pavilion
Interurban knowledge exchange
Interurban Network
knowledge transfer Europe
La Chaux De Fonds
Milan Trade Fair
Modern Urban Design
Multi-directional exchanges
municipal networks
Nicolae Iorga
Palacio De Bellas Artes
Plecnik
Practice Solutions
Prague Castle
Public Engagement
public health history
Transnational municipalism
transnational urbanism
Tuberculosis Dispensary
urban modernization
Urban planning
urban planning theory
Vice Versa
War Ii

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367333294
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Oct 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Around 1900 cities in Southern and Eastern Europe were persistently labeled "backward" and "delayed." Allegedly, they had no alternative but to follow the role model of the metropolises, of London, Paris or Vienna. This edited volume fundamentally questions this assumption. It shows that cities as diverse as Barcelona, Berdyansk, Budapest, Lviv, Milan, Moscow, Prague, Warsaw and Zagreb pursued their own agendas of modernization. In order to solve their pressing problems with respect to urban planning and public health, they searched for best practices abroad. The solutions they gleaned from other cities were eclectic to fit the specific needs of a given urban space and were thus often innovative. This applied urban knowledge was generated through interurban networks and multi-directional exchanges. Yet in the period around 1900, this transnational municipalism often clashed with the forging of urban and national identities, highlighting the tensions between the universal and the local.

This interurban perspective helps to overcome nationalist perspectives in historiography as well as outdated notions of "center and periphery." This volume will appeal to scholars from a large number of disciplines, including urban historians, historians of Eastern and Southern Europe, historians of science and medicine, and scholars interested in transnational connections.

Eszter Gantner (1971–2019) was a research fellow at the Herder Institute for Historical Research on East Central Europe from 2013 through 2019.

Heidi Hein-Kircher is head of the department "academic forum" at the Herder Institute for Historical Research on East Central Europe in Marburg, Germany.

Oliver Hochadel is a historian of science and a tenured researcher at the Institución Milá y Fontanals de Investigación en Humanidades (CSIC, Barcelona).