Project Outline. Berlin, Chapel Hill, York, June 2005

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Project Outline Berlin, Chapel Hill, York, June 2005 No epoch between the Thirty Years War the First World War affected Europe so directly permanently as the period 1792 1815. In these years Europe existed in a constant state of war that soon touched every European country profoundly shook them all. Because of their new character as national wars fought by mass armies the resultant changes in the conduct of warfare, these wars affected not only armies their soldiers officers but also civilian societies men women alike. Well into the twentieth century, this era, which was also a period of far-reaching economic, social political upheaval, played a central role in the academic historiography, the popular histories, the historical politics of all the European countries involved. Succeeding generations appear on the whole to have conceived of this period as the founding era not only of their nation or region its collective identity, but also of the European system of nation-states. The project is intended to examine these experiences memories of the Revolutionary Napoleonic Wars in the European nations regions involved in a long-term perspective. 1945 will be the end point of the analysis because the end of World War II the Holocaust mark a sharp break in the history of political culture memory all over Europe. The main focus of analysis will be on the images narratives that formed war experiences memories therefore collective identities all over Europe. Of central interest is the construction of the self the other through the drawing of boundaries defined in national, regional, social or cultural terms. The assumption is that the network of (trans)national regional images narratives that derived from the early period of modern world-wide war had long lasting effects on the political culture of Europe in general the relations of nations regions in particular. The most important sources for the analysis of war experiences will be letters, diaries war memories produced during shortly after the war. For the analysis of memories the most widespread media therefore source-materials appear to be (next to poetry, plays visual representations) printed autobiographies war memories, commemorative books, historical novels, in the twentieth century, films. By addressing the following five main questions the project intends to contribute to a genuinely European history. First, the project will examine how the Wars between 1792 1815 were experienced, perceived remembered in the participating nations regions by men women from different social strata. Secondly, it will ask which economic, social, political cultural factors were most influential in the conditioning of experiences, perceptions memories which commercial media of memory were

2 most popular widespread in the diffusion of memory. Thirdly, it will examine how far these different experiences remembrances formed collective identities, in particular national regional identities. Fourthly, it will consider which images narratives were most diffused throughout Europe, where, when, why there were overlaps or differences between dominant images narratives, reciprocal influences. Finally, it will ask to what extent was the collective memory of these wars influential in, or constitutive of, the development character of Europe. With these questions the project is not only investigating a desideratum of European historiography, but is doing so in a methodologically innovative way. In the first place, it combines the history of experience with the history of memory differentiates systematically between the communicative the cultural memory contributes to a history of memory media. Secondly, it analyses memory as a long-term phenomenon in the context of historical change. Thirdly, it studies the Revolutionary Napoleonic Wars as one period, intends to examine both the military experience the civilian societies at war. Finally, the project will be conducive to a comparative European history of the long nineteenth early twentieth century. Two project groups (one based in Britain one in Germany) will conduct research on the main war powers: Austria Germany, Britain Irel, France, as well as Russia Pol. The two project groups will collaborate in a comparative working group, which will meet for a series of three workshops two international interdisciplinary conferences. The working group will be part of a wider network of experts working in different disciplines countries on the wars between 1792 1815 in European experience memories. Through this network, connected by a website an electronic discussion forum, will research by other scholars be included, who work on the major war powers other involved European states regions. Till now 190 scholars from 17 countries have joined the network. The published results of the three-year project, in addition to monographs articles, will include at least one co-authored comparative volume that presents the research of the working group a two-volume anthology with selected workshop conferences papers. The Comparative British-German Working Group British Project Group: Nations, Borders, Identities: The Revolutionary Napoleonic Wars in European Experiences (1792 1820) Directed by Prof. Alan Forrest (project director), Prof. Richard Bessel, Prof. Karen Hagemann Dr. Jane Rendall Funded by the Arts Humanities Research Council (AHRC) Sub-project 1 on France: by Dr. Karine Rance (postdoc project) Sub-project 2 on Great Britain Irel: by Dr. Catriona Kennedy (postdoc project) Sub-project 3 on Austria Germany: by Dr. Leighton S. James (postdoc project)

3 The three sub-projects analyse autobiographical sources produced between 1792 1820 (mainly diaries, letters unpublished war memories) Website: www.york.ac.uk/inst/cecs/nbiproject.htm German Project Group: Nations, Borders, Identities: The Revolutionary Napoleonic Wars in European Memories (1815 1945) Directed by Prof. Karen Hagemann (project director), PD Dr. Arnd Bauerkämper, Prof. Etienne François Prof. Hartmut Kaelble Funded by a grant of the German Research Foundation (DFG) Sub-project 1 on France: by Dr. Kirstin Schäfer (post-doctoral project) Sub-project 2 on Great Britain: by Lars Peters M.A. (doctoral thesis) Sub-project 3 on Austria Germany: by Maria Schultz M.A. (doctoral thesis) FU Berlin, Berlin School for Comparative European History Sub-project 4 on Russia Pol: by Dr. Ruth Leiserowitz (research project) (project coordinator) FU Berlin, Berlin School for Comparative European History The four sub-projects analyse war memories published between 1815 1945 in commemorative texts (mainly war memories historical novels as well as biographies, commemorative books, plays lyrics) Sub-project 5 on feature films produced till 1945 in Austria Germany, Britain France: by Wolfgang Koller M.A. (doctoral thesis) Workshops Conferences of the Comparative British-German Working Group the Network Workshops: The Revolutionary Napoleonic Wars: New Approaches Future Questions of Research MGFA, Potsdam, November 1, 2004 (funded by the MGFA) The Experiences Memories of War in European Comparison: (Trans)national Interdisciplinary Approaches European Academy Berlin, November 11 12, 2005 War Experiences Identities: The Revolutionary Napoleonic Wars in Contemporary Perception German Historical Institute, London, February 24 25, 2006

4 International interdisciplinary conferences: Gender, Politics, War: The Wars of Revolution Liberation - Transatlantic Comparisons University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, May 17 19, 2007 Nations, Borders, Identities: The Revolutionary Napoleonic Wars in European Experiences Memories University of Mannheim, October 11 13, 2007 Contact: DFG Project Group Nations, Borders, Identities Technical University of Berlin Centre for French Studies, Ernst-Reuter-Platz 7, Sekr. TEL 13-1 Berliner School for Comparative European History Koserstr. 20 14195 Berlin, Germany Email: info@nbi.tu-berlin.de Website: www.nbi.tu-berlin.de

5 Project board: Prof. Karen Hagemann (project director) The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill History Department Hamilton Hall CB # 3195 Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA Email: Hagemann@unc.edu Technische Universität Berlin Institut für Geschichte und Kunstgeschichte Franklinstr. 28/29 Email: hagemann@kgw.tu-berlin.de PD Dr. Arnd Bauerkämper Freie Universität Berlin Berliner Kolleg für Vergleichende Geschichte Europas (BKVGE) Koserstr. 20 14195 Berlin, Germany Email: baue@zedat.fu-berlin.de Prof. Richard Bessel Department of History Heslington York YO10 5DD, Great Britain Email: rjb8@york.ac.uk Prof. Alan Forrest The Centre for Eighteenth Century Studies The King s Manor, Exhibition Square York Y01 7EP, Great Britain Email: aif1@york.ac.uk Prof. Hartmut Kaelble Berliner Kolleg für Vergleichende Geschichte Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin Institut für Geschichtswissenschaften Unter den Linden 6 10099 Berlin, Germany Email: KaelbleH@geschichte.hu-berlin.de Dr. Jane Rendall The Centre for Eighteenth Century Studies The King s Manor, Exhibition Square York Y01 7EP, Great Britain Email: jr3@york.ac.uk Prof. Etienne François Technische Universität Berlin Frankreichzentrum Ernst-Reuter-Platz 7, Sekr. TEL 13-1 Email: etienne.francois@tu-berlin.de