Reimagining Citizenship in Postwar Europe maps the generation and growth of novel forms of belonging in the years after World War II, crisscrossing the continent from Madrid to Warsaw and from Athens to London. Even as Europe struggled to rebuild, new forms of identity, statehood, and citizenship were beginning to take shape.
Rachel Chin and Samuel Clowes Huneke bring together a diverse group of scholars to illustrate how citizenship was reimagined in the postwar decades in unusual settings and unexpected ways, while highlighting how ordinary citizens, living in democratic and authoritarian regimes alike, struggled to forge new kinds of belonging through which to assert their human rights and human dignity. Ultimately, Reimagining Citizenship in Postwar Europe contends that if we are to grapple with fraying citizenship in the twenty-first century, we must first look to when, how, and why citizenship originated in the calamitous years after World War II.
Citizenship in European History
The Stateless Struggle to Belong in the Postwar Period
Women's Suffrage and the Making of the French Union,1944-1946
Citizenship, Psychiatry, and Gender in Postwar Vienna
Race and Racism in the Citizenship Law and NaturalisationPractice of Early West Germany
Statelessness and Social Citizenship of Greek Civil WarRefugees in Post-1948 Communist Czechoslovakia
Precarious citizenship in Olivia Manning's The BalkanTrilogy
The Francoist conception of citizenship in postwar Spain
Gender, Labor, and the Forging of Socialist Citizenship inEast Germany
Compulsory Voting, Gender and Race under the FrenchFourth Republic
Commercial Sex, Gender, and Citizenship in PostwarPoland
Southern Italian Migrants and Contested Social Rights in1970s Italy and West Germany
The Emergence of European Citizenship
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