History 260
From Habsburg to Hitler:
Bohemian Politics,
1848-1945
Jeremy King jking@mtholyoke.edu
MW 2:30-3:45 Telephone: x2749
Fall 2000 Office hours: Tues., 12-2
Mount Holyoke College Skinner Hall, room 306
This course explores the complex, often comic, and ultimately tragic history of Bohemia, a territory located today in the Czech Republic, but previously a part of the Habsburg Monarchy, of Czechoslovakia, and of Hitler's Third Reich. Beginning with the Revolution of 1848, students will progress through the stunning achievements and worrisome trends of Emperor-King Francis Joseph's sixty-eight-year reign, as well as through the horrors and hopes of the World Wars. Emphasis will lie on understanding nationalism - in the sense not only of understanding the stances of the two national movements, Czech and German, in Bohemia, but also of understanding how those linked movements eventually succeeded, despite modest beginnings, in dominating Bohemian politics as a whole.
Readings will average slightly more than 100 pages a week, and will come from many primary sources, as well as from a few secondary ones. Please refer to the table of contents in your course packs for full citations of the readings listed for each class session below. Those sessions will feature a combination of lecture and discussion. Come ready to ask questions and to answer them.
Course requirements
Attendance and participation in class (20%)
Take-home midterm examination, due October 30 (30%)
Self-scheduled final examination (50%)
Schedule of Topics and Readings
1. Monday, September 11 INTRODUCTION
2. Wednesday, September 13 BOHEMIA AND THE HABSBURGS
Readings: Kollár, "The Daughter of Sláva," in Selver, An
Anthology of Czechoslovak Literature, 42-46
Kohl, Austria, 56-87
Guido Kisch, In Search of Freedom, 26-45, 202-03, 209
3. Monday, September 18 CZECHS, GERMANS, AND JEWS?
Readings: Cohen, The Politics of Ethnic Survival, 19-34
Peter Demetz, Prague in Black and Gold, 286-313
Palacký, Letter to Frankfurt, in Jelavich, The Habsburg Monarchy, 18-22
4. Wednesday, September 20 AFTER 1848
Readings: Cohen, 34-51
von Suttner, Memoirs, 4-17
Kimball, Czech Nationalism, 1-4, 25-42
5. Monday, September 25 INTERMEZZO
Readings: King, Budweisers No More, Chapter 2, 30-45
"Gott erhalte," and "Die Wacht am Rhein," in Bantock, Sixty
Patriotic Songs, 60-63, 42-45
"Kde domov mj?," and "Hej Slované," in Botsford, Folk Songs,
130-31, 157, 41-42
"What Is the German's Fatherland?," 1-page text
"Deutschland, Deutschland
über alles," 1-page text
Kimball, 61-79
6. Wednesday, September 27 CLASS CANCELLED
7. Monday, October 2 THE COMPROMISE OF 1867
Readings: 1867 Austrian Constitution, in Fichtner, The Habsburg
Empire, 51-61, 154-58
May, The Hapsburg Monarchy, 46-53, 58-68
Kimball, 80-91
8. Wednesday, October 4 NATIONAL MUSIC
Readings: Kimball, 124-46
Smetana, Wenzig, and pindler, Libue
(libretto), 1-33
Synek Graff, "Notes on The Bartered Bride," in Stagebill, 44-47
Beckerman, "Czech Mate," in Stagebill, 24-28
FALL BREAK
9. Wednesday, October 11 THE "IRON RING"
Readings: apek, Talks with T. G. Masaryk, 132-35, 140-45
King, 111-48
10. Monday, October 16 NATIONHOOD AND CLASS
Readings: King, 148-52, 165-85
"The Internationale," 1-page text
Holek, autobiography, in Kelly, The German Worker, 97-120
11. Wednesday, October 18 NATIONHOOD, GENDER, RELIGION, AND MORE
Readings: Hanel, autobiography, in Iggers, Women of Prague,
164-89, 197
Whitman, The Realm of the Habsburgs, 26-42, 76-91, 111-13, 118-21, 278-85
12. Monday, October 23 THE BADENI CRISIS
Readings: Herzl, "Prague Jews between Two Nations," in Iggers,
The Jews of Bohemia and Moravia, 231-32
Twain, "Stirring Times in Austria," 208-35
King, 185-207
13. Wednesday, October 25 NATIONHOOD TRIUMPHANT
Readings: King, 219-55
Debate in the Bohemian Diet, in Fichtner, 171-72
Scheu, Wanderungen durch Böhmen, 14pp.
14. Monday, October 30 MIDTERM EXAMINATION DUE
15. Wednesday, November 1 FRANZ KAFKA OF PRAGUE, PART I
Readings: Wagenbach, Franz Kafka: Pictures of a Life, 40-41,
103-04, 112, 142-44, 213, 155, 183
Chronology of Kafka's life, in Heller, The Basic Kafka, xxix-xxxv
Kafka, diary entries and letters, in Heller, 256-60, 275-83
Kafka, "The Judgment," in Heller, 54-66
16. Monday, November 6 FRANZ KAFKA OF PRAGUE, PART II
Readings: Kafka, "The Metamorphosis," in Heller, 1-54
Kafka, "Accident Prevention Regulations," in Wagenbach, Kafka's Prague,
82-84
17. Wednesday, November 8 THE GREAT WAR
Readings: King, 255-64
Francis Joseph, "To My peoples," in Fichtner, 190-92
Haek, The Good Soldier Schweik, 150-74, 188-93, 244-56
Medek, "1914," in Selver, 294-96
18. Monday, November 13 THE NEW MASTER OF BOHEMIA
Readings: King, Chapter 6 (begin)
Egon Erwin Kisch, Sensation Fair, 78-95
Lederer, "Three Encounters," in Iggers, The Jews of Bohemia and Moravia,
328-33
Glaser, Czecho-Slovakia, 26-33
19. Wednesday, November 15 THE CZECHOSLOVAK REPUBLIC
Readings: Boyce and Dawson, The University of Prague, 52-93
Voskovec and Werich, "Liberated Theater," handouts
Hanna Demetz, The House on Prague Street, 1-9, 26-33
20. Monday, November 20 REVERSAL OF FORTUNE
Readings: Hanna Demetz, 33-62
King, Chapter 6 (middle)
Kennan, From Prague after Munich, 114-18, 131-34, 157-59, 179-95, 207-11
THANKSGIVING BREAK
21. Monday, November 27 WORLD WAR II
Readings: Rothschild, Return to Diversity, 32-39
Hanna Demetz, 62-122
Kennan, 226-27, 236-40
22. Wednesday, November 29 GERMAN, CZECH, JEW: THE RACIAL STATE
Readings: King, Chapter 6 (end)
Jacoby, The Racial State, 73-92
Erdely, Germany's First European Protectorate, 55-64, 74-82, 138-150
FILM SCREENING, Sunday evening, December 3:
"The Closely Watched Trains" [1966]. 92 minutes. Based on the 1965 novella by Bohumil Hrabal. Directed by Jií Menzel. Place of screening TBA.
23. Monday, December 4 FINAL SOLUTIONS
Readings: Hanna Demetz, 122-69
Bene, President Bene on War and Peace, 132-45
24. Wednesday, December 6 1945: REVERSAL AGAIN
Readings: King, Chapter 7
Hanna Demetz, 170-86
Hanuová, What to Do with Them?, 35
Turnwald, Documents on the Expulsion of the Sudeten Germans, 1-17
25. Monday, December 11 BOHEMIA, FAREWELL
Readings: Stránský, East Wind over Prague, 1-3, 12-16, 22-37
Werfel, "An Essay upon the Meaning of Imperial Austria," in Twilight of a
World, 3-40
26. Wednesday, December 13 SUMMING UP