In the early nineteenth century, several Slavic intellectuals believed in a single Slavic nation speaking a single language, though positing various taxonomies of the nation’s component “tribes” and the language’s component “dialects.” Nevertheless, recent scholars, both historians and linguists, prove so extraordinarily unwilling to acknowledge the existence of Panslavism that several falsify the historical record in an effort to make historical figures conform to modern national and linguistic thinking. In this event, Alexander Maxwell will discuss Jan Kollár, Ljudevit Gaj, and Ľudovít Štúr as three sample Panslavs, the misrepresentation of their ideas in recent historiography, and why so many scholars seek to erase Panslavism from the historical record.
Speaker:
Alexander Maxwell is Associate Professor in History at Victoria University in Wellington, New Zealand. He is the author of Choosing Slovakia (2009), Patriots Against Fashion (2014) and Everyday Nationalism in Hungary (2019). He has published widely on the history of Central Europe, nationalism theory, and history pedagogy. He is currently writing a book about Habsburg Panslavism.
Moderator:
Harris Mylonas is Associate Professor of Political Science and International Affairs at George Washington University and Editor-in-Chief of Nationalities Papers. He is the author of The Politics of Nation-Building: Making Co-Nationals, Refugees, and Minorities (Cambridge University Press, 2012).