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Watersheds
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30 April 2016

“If one considers the book as an entangled narrative fabric …, it transforms into the forum set forth by the editors: to meet and to merge, to enter into a critical dialogue, and to combine many perspectives and disciplines into one book. As a whole, Watersheds goes beyond national perspectives and disciplines. It is more unifying than separating, more inclusive than exclusive. This book not only gives a more transnational direction to this interdisciplinary field of study, but it also opens new ways of looking at a range of authors and works that are not included. … After the Soviet Union dissolved and the central European states were incorporated into the European Union, the tension between inclusion and exclusion perhaps seemed to be resolved for a brief moment; East and West seemed to be closer to each other. But after multiple terrorist attacks, the refugee crisis, the Brexit vote, and recent elections, the notion of Danubia possesses an even stronger resonance, which suggests a tolerance of difference in a time when it appears that many new borders are dividing Europe. This emerging atmosphere of exclusion makes Watersheds an important contribution to scholarship of the Danube; it is a valuable book for everyone who can image a world without borders to read.” —Christiane Fischer, Rutgers University, German Studies Review Vol. 41 No. 3
— Christiane Fischer
Matthew D. Miller is Assistant Professor of German at Colgate University in Hamilton, New York, specializing in twentieth and twenty-first century literature, theater, film, and critical and aesthetic theory. His book project Mauer, Migration, Maps: The German Epic in the Cold War focuses on works by Peter Weiss, Uwe Johnson, and Alexander Kluge.
Acknowledgments
Introduction
River Futures
Marijeta Bozovic and Matthew D. Miller
Chapter 1
Danube Limes: The Limits of the Geographic-Cultural Imaginary
Katherine Arens
Chapter 2
Taking the Waters: The Danube’s Reception in Austrian and Central/Eastern European Cinema History
Robert Dassanowsky
Chapter 3
Viennese Blood: Assimilation and Exclusion in Viennese Popular Music
Micaela Baranello
Chapter 4
Caught in the Effluvial Draft: The Fluid Sources of the Folktale
Henry Sussman
Chapter 5
New York on the Danube: The Transatlantic Transference of Habsburg Ethnology and Autocracy in Kafka’s Amerika: The Missing Person
Robert Lemon
Chapter 6
Private Looking and Collective Memory in The Danube Exodus (1998)
Jennifer Stob
Chapter 7
Jelinek and the Roma: A Danubian Tragedy
Karl Ivan Solibakke
Chapter 8
Ravaged Empire: Water and Power in Prewar Hungary
Robert Nemes
Chapter 9
Cold Days in the Cold War on the Hungarian-Serbian Border
Jessie Labov
Chapter 10
Allergic Reactions: Danube and the Ex-centric Imaginary of Europe
Tomislav Z. Longinović
Chapter 11
Against the Stream: The Danube, the Video, and the Nonbiodegradables of Europe
Dragan Kujundžić
Chapter 12
Deconstructing Claims to (Jewish) Victimhood
Amanda Lerner
Chapter 13
Modernization’s Undercurrents: The Folk in Postwar Socialist Romanian Architecture
Juliana Maxim
Chapter 14
Where the Water Sheds: Disputed Deposits at the Ends of the Danube
Tanya Richardson
Bibliography
Notes on Watersheds and Its Contributors
Index