Horizon 2020 (2014 - 2020)

Writing Jewish History: Ancient Judaism as a Political Problem in Central Europe at the Rise of the Nation State: AJAPP

Last update: Apr 3, 2021 Last update: Apr 3, 2021

Details

Locations:UK
Start Date:Sep 1, 2017
End Date:Aug 31, 2019
Contract value: EUR 183,454
Sectors:Civil Society & NGOs, Culture Civil Society & NGOs, Culture
Categories:Grants
Date posted:Apr 3, 2021

Associated funding

Associated experts

Description

Programme(s): H2020-EU.1.3.2. - Nurturing excellence by means of cross-border and cross-sector mobility
Topic(s): MSCA-IF-2016 - Individual Fellowships
Call for proposal: H2020-MSCA-IF-2016
Funding Scheme: MSCA-IF-EF-ST - Standard EF

Grant agreement ID: 749628

Objective
AJAPP investigates the integration of religious minorities amid the rise of nation-states in Central Europe in the late modern period. Specifically, AJAPP focuses on political representation of ancient Judaism by Catholics, Jews, and Protestants throughout Prussia, Austria, and Bavaria in the course of the 19th century. The goal is to understand how portraits of the past reflected both the concerns and the conditions of modern times and, in turn, how these portraits impacted contemorary debates on issues of national, cultural, religious, and ethnic identity. It analyses how political and social differences - as opposed to strictly ethnic or cultural ones - as well as subtle prejudices manifested themselves in discussions of the past, how boundaries were made within a shared tradition, and how identities were configured in regional and national entities. This period is especially imortant as this was a time when distinct regions were negotiating their political relationships to one another (often with violence), when public discourse was debating which communities had which stakes in and rights to the political realm, and when the past became especially contested territory for determining which groups were insiders and which ones were outsiders. Given the current rise in regionalism, nationalism, and right-wing extremism across Europe, AJAPP addresses a central problem palpable on the local, international, and global levels today. It reveals how implicit assumptions inscribe the conceptualisation of the past, which then find their way back into the present.

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