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Coming to Terms with the Past: The Case of the ‘House of Austrian History’ (Haus der Geschichte Österreich) in the Wake of the Rise of Populist Nationalism in Austria

Authors :
Stephan Neuhäuser
Source :
Modern Languages Open, Vol 0, Iss 1 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Liverpool University Press, 2020.

Abstract

The Republic of Austria emerged as one of the new states from the rubble of the Habsburg Empire after the First World War. Delegates from German-speaking provinces of the former Empire gathered in Vienna in October 1918 to discuss statehood. Whilst early debates focused on “German Austria” as a nation in its own right, the idea of an “Anschluss” with Germany gained ground, and soon became the prevailing political concept. Nonetheless, the State Treaty of St. Germain (1919) prohibited Austria any political association with Germany, which forced Austrians to discourse about national identity, a struggle that lasted until well after the Second World War and is still ongoing in the Austrian political far-right. Against this backdrop, Austrians embarked on an epic debate about a “national” museum as early as 1919. Recent Austrian history has since seen numerous debates about the appropriate way of visually representing national identity. Contentious issues include(d) inter alia the home-grown Austrian variation of Fascism 1934–1938, involvement in Nazi crimes, the lenient post-war treatment of Nazi perpetrators, issues pertaining to ethnic minorities, and questions of compensation and restitution for victims of National Socialism. Exactly 99 years after the idea of a “History Chamber” surfaced, the first national museum covering contemporary Austrian history opened in November 2018. Regrettably, the debate restarted just a few days ahead of the grand opening at a hastily arranged press conference, in which the Minister of Culture outlined a new concept for the museum. Claudia Leeb (Washington State University) explains these ongoing heated debates about the museum with defense mechanisms pertaining to Austria’s Nazi-past, resulting in the continuing inability of contemporary Austrian society to live up to guilt and to come to terms with its past. One of the major “defense fighters” is the Freedom Party (FPO), a right-wing populist party that briefly joined the Austrian government in 2017–2018 and strictly opposes taking any responsibility for Austria’s Nazi past. This paper addresses Austria’s ‘coming to terms with her past’ in the wake of the rise of populist nationalism and examines the possible future of the Austrian culture of remembrance, particularly with regard to the fledgling Museum of Contemporary Austrian History.

Subjects

Subjects :
Language and Literature

Details

Language :
Catalan; Valencian, German, English, Spanish; Castilian, French, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, Chinese
ISSN :
20525397
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Modern Languages Open
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.860ed57ca3814f558baab9d7241b7ba5
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3828/mlo.v0i0.326