Acknowledgments
INTRODUCTION
Ethnicizing Europe?, by Éva Kovács, Raul Cârstocea, and Gábor Egry
PART 1: LAWS AND LEGAL CONCEPTS OF CITIZENSHIP
1 Demarcating the National Family: French Nation-Building, "Authentic" Alsatians, German Immigrants, and Alsace, 1914-1920, by Devlin M. Scofield
2 Citizens without a State: "Nationality," International Law, and Jewish Emigration to the United States,1918-1921, by Zachary Mazur
3 "May it be as soon as possible!": Polish Governments' Plans Toward Jewish Mass Emigration, by Zofia Trebacz
PART 2: LANGUAGE AS ETHNOPOLITICAL PRACTICE
4 Language Fight: Conflicts over Ukrainian/Ruthenian Minority Schools in Eastern Galicia in the Second Polish Republic, by Elisabeth Haid-Lener
5 Looking for a Viennese Swabian village: Landsmannschaft Migrant Activism and Its Limits in Interwar Vienna, by Pauli Aro
6 Controlled Youth Emancipation: Hungarian Germans as Part of the Group Formation Process in the Interwar Period, by Zsolt Vitári
PART 3: RACIALIZATION AND RADICALIZATION OF ETHNICITY
7 Living in disturbed times: The Ethnopolitical and Social Consequences of the War and of the New State Order in the Bohemian Lands, 1918-1923, by Pavel Kladiwa and Andrea Pokludová
8 Historical Debate About the Shared Roots and Divergent Causes of the Green, Red, and White Terrors, by Béla Bodó
9 Polish and Ukrainian Propaganda Concerning the War for Eastern Galicia, by Jagoda Wierzejska
AFTERWORD
Chutes and Ladders: Racialization in Habsburg Central Europe After 1918, by Tara Zahra
Index
Contributors