1st Edition
Biopolitics in Central and Eastern Europe in the 20th Century Fearing for the Nation
Introduction
Joachim von Puttkamer and Immo Rebitschek
1. Is Biopower Something to Be Afraid Of?: Biopolitics as a Research Category in Historiography
Barbara Klich-Kluczewska
Section I: Issues of Reproduction
2. Regenerating the Nation: Eugenics and Racial Hygiene in Early Twentieth-Century Austria
Herwig Czech
3. ‘Each Jewish Child Is Precious’: Survivor Community in Poland and Its Biopolitical Discourses
Natalia Aleksiun
4. ‘Marital Intercourse Means Togetherness and Parenthood’: The Biopolitics of Catholic Marriage Preparation in Poland during the 1970s
Agata Ignaciuk
5. Whose Children?: Pronatalist Incentives and Social Categorization in Socialist Romania
Corina Doboș
6. State and Parenthood: Family Planning Policy in Socialist Yugoslavia (1945–1991)
Ivana Dobrivojević Tomic´
7. Blind Faith or Divine Providence?: Global Catholicism and the Population Bomb
Wannes Dupont
Section II: Beyond Procreation: Health, Nutrition and Hygiene
8. Feeding Hungry Bodies: Children’s Nutrition as Biopolitics after the Great War
Friederike Kind-Kovács
9. Disinfection Trains: Fighting Lice on Polish Railways, 1918–1920
Łukasz Mieszkowski
10. The Intricacies of Communist Biopolitics: Control of Disease and Epidemics in the Polish Countryside after 1945
Ewelina Szpak
11. State Socialist Biopolitics: Four Stages of Human Development in Post-War Czechoslovakia
Jakub Rákosník and Radka Šustrová
12. Imperial Biopolitics: Famine in Russia and the Soviet Union, 1891–1947
Immo Rebitschek
13. Fearing the Nation, Fearing for the Nation and Fearing Other Nations: Compulsory Vaccination in Twentieth-Century Germany
Malte Thießen
Biography
Barbara Klich-Kluczewska is an Associate Professor at the Jagiellonian University in Cracow and a cultural historian of twentieth-century Poland. Her fields of research include history of family, history of sexuality and gender, biopolitics and history of experts’ knowledge.
Joachim von Puttkamer is Director of the Imre Kertész Kolleg Jena at the Friedrich Schiller University Jena. His research focusses on nationalism and statehood in modern Central and Eastern Europe.
Immo Rebitschek is an Assistant Professor at the Department for Eastern European History at the Friedrich Schiller University Jena. He has published widely on the history of the Soviet procuracy in Stalinist Russia and is currently focussing his research on the history of famines in the late Russian empire.






