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Children, poverty and nationalism in...
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Griffante, Andrea.
Children, poverty and nationalism in Lithuania, 1900-1940
Record Type:
Electronic resources : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Children, poverty and nationalism in Lithuania, 1900-1940by Andrea Griffante.
Author:
Griffante, Andrea.
Published:
Cham :Springer International Publishing :2019.
Description:
vii, 148 p. :ill., digital ;24 cm.
Contained By:
Springer eBooks
Subject:
Poor childrenHistory20th century.Lithuania
Subject:
LithuaniaPictorial works.
Online resource:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-30870-4
ISBN:
9783030308704$q(electronic bk.)
Children, poverty and nationalism in Lithuania, 1900-1940
Griffante, Andrea.
Children, poverty and nationalism in Lithuania, 1900-1940
[electronic resource] /by Andrea Griffante. - Cham :Springer International Publishing :2019. - vii, 148 p. :ill., digital ;24 cm.
1. The Future of the Nation: The Emergence of Poor Children as a Problem -- 2. The Great War over Children, 1914-1918 -- 3. Rehabilitating Children: Lithuania and International Humanitarian Aid, 1918-1923 -- 4. The New Interwar Order: Children, Rehabilitation and Discipline, 1923-1940 -- 5. Final Remarks.
This book discusses the emergence of orphaned, abandoned and poor child care in Lithuania from the early 20th century to the beginning of World War II. In particular, it focuses on how poor child care practices were influenced by the nationalist and political discourse, and how orphanages became privileged institutions for nation building. Emerging during World War I and the early postwar humanitarian crisis, the Lithuanian orphaned and destitute children's assistance network remained managed mainly by private actors. The field remained highly competitive. Until the early 1920s, concurrence had an eminently ethno-national character and the Lithuanian network was challenged by stronger Polish poor child assistance institutions. Nation-building goals did not prevent the emergence of political concurrence within separate ethno-national assistance networks. Even if political concurrence did not stop cooperation within the ethnic community, it did confirm the multiple character of national mobilization and consolidation processes in which otherness is by no means only ethnic in content.
ISBN: 9783030308704$q(electronic bk.)
Standard No.: 10.1007/978-3-030-30870-4doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
855517
Poor children
--History--Lithuania--20th century.Subjects--Geographical Terms:
439711
Lithuania
--Pictorial works.
LC Class. No.: HQ792.L78 / G75 2019
Dewey Class. No.: 362.7094793
Children, poverty and nationalism in Lithuania, 1900-1940
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1. The Future of the Nation: The Emergence of Poor Children as a Problem -- 2. The Great War over Children, 1914-1918 -- 3. Rehabilitating Children: Lithuania and International Humanitarian Aid, 1918-1923 -- 4. The New Interwar Order: Children, Rehabilitation and Discipline, 1923-1940 -- 5. Final Remarks.
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This book discusses the emergence of orphaned, abandoned and poor child care in Lithuania from the early 20th century to the beginning of World War II. In particular, it focuses on how poor child care practices were influenced by the nationalist and political discourse, and how orphanages became privileged institutions for nation building. Emerging during World War I and the early postwar humanitarian crisis, the Lithuanian orphaned and destitute children's assistance network remained managed mainly by private actors. The field remained highly competitive. Until the early 1920s, concurrence had an eminently ethno-national character and the Lithuanian network was challenged by stronger Polish poor child assistance institutions. Nation-building goals did not prevent the emergence of political concurrence within separate ethno-national assistance networks. Even if political concurrence did not stop cooperation within the ethnic community, it did confirm the multiple character of national mobilization and consolidation processes in which otherness is by no means only ethnic in content.
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based on 0 review(s)
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000000177589
電子館藏
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EB HQ792.L78 G849 2019 2019
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https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-30870-4
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