dc.description.tableofcontents | -- Introduction: Re-examining National Identity in Nineteenth-century Central Europe and Italy -- 1. A Mission of Mediation: Dalmatia’s Multi-national Regionalism from the 1830s–60s -- 2. ‘Unity Versus Difference’: The Politics of Region-building and National Identities in Tyrol, 1830–67 -- 3. Trieste, 1830–70: From Cosmopolitanism to the Nation -- 4. Voluntary Associations and Nation-building in Nineteenth-century Prague -- 5. German, Austrian or ‘Salzburger’? National identities in Salzburg c.1830–70 -- 6. Searching for a Role: Austrian Rule, National Perspectives and Memories of the ‘Serenissima’ in Venice, 1848–66 -- 7. The Construction of National Identities in the Northern Bohemian Borderland, 1848–71 -- 8. Between the Federative Nation and the National State: Public Perceptions of the Foundation of the German Empire in Southern Germany and Austria -- 9. Similar Paths, Different ‘Nations’?: Ultramontanisation and the Old Catholic Movement in Upper Austria, 1870–71 -- 10. Symbolic Representations of the Nation: Baden, Bavaria, and Saxony, c.1860–80 -- Conclusions: Performative Effects and ‘Deep Images’ in National Discourse | en |