Austria
Professor Decker (German) and Associate Professor Richter (Political
Science)
During fall semester 2001, Bates students, including entering first-year
students, can study language, culture, history, and politics in Vienna
and its environs. No prior knowledge of German is required, though language
learning is a focus of the program. Located in the heart of Europe, Vienna
combines the elegance of an old imperial capital with the vibrancy of
a modern metropolis. The former seat of the Habsburg Empire, Vienna is
renowned for its museums, palaces, and historic sites. The city of Mozart,
Schubert, Mahler, Freud, and Klimt, Vienna has a rich intellectual heritage
and remains one of the key centers of the performing arts in Europe. Vienna
is also a political center; its close proximity and historical ties to
former communist capitals such as Prague, Budapest, and Bratislava have
given it a unique role in the creation of a new Europe since the end of
the Cold War.
The program begins in late August with a three-week intensive German
course at Cultura Wien, a German language institute. Students continue
their language study in German courses through the semester. Students
are placed in German courses based on their ability. Travel to the Danube
Valley, Prague, Budapest, Bratislava, Salzburg, Innsbruck, and Munich
is integrated with course work.
Courses
001. Austria in the Twentieth Century. This course
explores major political and cultural developments in Austria from the
end of the nineteenth century to the present, giving particular attention
to the changing role of Vienna. Students examine the decline of the multiethnic
Habsburg Empire and the outbreak of World War I; the ill-fated First Austrian
Republic, which emerged from the Great War; Austro-fascism and the National
Socialist Anschluss; and the establishment of a stable democracy in the
post-World War II period. Attention is given to the emergence of modernism
in turn-of-the-century Vienna, post- World War II attempts to come to
terms with Austria's past, and evolving concepts of Austrian identity.
Open to first-year students. C. Decker.
002. Vienna, Budapest, and Prague: A Comparison
in History and Politics. This course traces the history of these Central
European capitals from the fall of the Austro-Hungarian Empire through
the end of the Cold War. Though these cities experienced events of the
twentieth century differently, their common Habsburg heritage and geographical
position has meant that, in many respects, their fates have been linked.
The course examines the roles the cities played under the Habsburg Empre
and their respective countries efforts to create a new identity after
its demise. Next, the course focuses on the part the cities played in
World War II and the Cold War. Students examine Prague and Budapest under
Soviet-style communism and the unique role that neutral Austria played
in a divided Europe, and consider the recent postcommunist transitions
to democracy in Hungary and the Czech Republic. Open to first-year students.
J. Richter.
003. Intensive German I. Open to first-year
students. Staff.
004. Intensive German II. Open to first-year
students. Staff.
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