aber ein stolzer Bettler Erinnerungen aus einer verlorenen Generation
1974
by Engel Jánosi
TotalitarianismGeopoliticsWorld War ILabor MarketLiberalismEducationInternational TradeCarl MengerEugen von Bohm-BawerkHans KelsenKarl MarxImmanuel KantMethodologyMax WeberSocial DemocracyVladimir LeninWoodrow WilsonInflationJoseph SchumpeterFriedrich A. HayekLudwig von MisesSpeculationEric VoegelinOtto von BismarckAustrian SchoolGottfried HaberlerOskar MorgensternOthmar SpannPhenomenologyKlemens von MetternichAnschlussBenito MussoliniThomas AquinasWorld War IIEconomic HistoryAlexis de TocquevilleMarxismBank of EnglandGold StandardMonetary TheoryUsuryAnthropologyPolitical PhilosophyPlatoEdmund HusserlGeorg Wilhelm Friedrich HegelAdolf HitlerFritz MachlupFriedrich von WieserKnowledge EconomicsRussian Revolution
Table of Contents · 119 segments
1
Front Matter, Publication Data, and Contentsessay
2
Preface: Aim, Method, and Acknowledgmentsessay
3
Youth in Hofzeile: Birth, Döbling, and the Family Housechapter
4
Adolf Engel de Jánosi I: Poverty, Self-Education, and 1848 Patriotismchapter
5
Adolf Engel de Jánosi II: Timber, Paternalism, Jánosi, and Komlóchapter
6
Hofzeile 12: Family Home, Gardens, Statues, and Grandfather’s Deathchapter
7
Religious Respect and Maternal Grandfather Heinrich Klingerchapter
8
Josef ‘Joska’ Engel, Wagner, Jewish Identity, and Mauthausenchapter
9
The Father: Timber Expertise, Ibsen, Theater, Loyalty, and Home Lifechapter
10
The Mother: Nature, Independence, Childhood Activities, and Mahler’s Circlechapter
11
Mahler, Dance Lessons, and Spiritualist Evenings in the Hofzeilechapter
12
Family Holidays, Gymnasium Years, Matura, and Adolescent Lovechapter
13
Beginning University Studies in Vienna: Music, Law, Philosophy, Economics, and Legal Theorychapter
14
Bernatzik, Bourgeois Vienna, Theater, Music, Politics, and Heidelberg before the Warchapter
15
Entering the First World War: Artillery Training, Riding, Kraków, and Polachapter
16
From Pola Anti-Aircraft Training to the South Tyrol Frontchapter
17
A Multinational Battery and the First Move Toward Combatchapter
18
Galicia, Retreat, Schnitzler, and the Death of the Old Emperorchapter
19
The Karst Front, Isonzo Battles, and the Death of Rudichapter
20
Observation, Duty, and an Unexpected Capture on the Piavechapter
21
Piave Preparations, Commanders, and the Observation Balloonchapter
22
The Piave Battle, Wounding, and Recoverychapter
23
War Weariness, Bolshevism, and Frontline Readingchapter
24
Armistice, Wilsonian Hope, Retreat, and the Dissolution of the Batterychapter
25
Return to Postwar Vienna after the Frontchapter
26
The Two Doctorates: From Law to History in Ruined Viennachapter
27
Alfred Francis Pribram and Viennese Historical Scholarshipchapter
28
Pribram’s Seminar, Archives, and the Second Doctoratechapter
29
Intellectual Apathy, Middle-Class Ruin, and the Sale of the Hofzeile Housechapter
30
In the Bank: Heinrich Bronner and the Lombard Bankchapter
31
Bank Work, Renaissance Studies, Carlette, and the Lombard-Escompte Collapsechapter
32
Taking Over the Factory after the Father’s Deathchapter
33
Factory Labor, Municipal Contracts, and Failed Diversificationchapter
34
The Factory during the Austrian Civil War of February 1934chapter
35
Renaissance Reflections, First Habilitation Attempt, and Rechberg Researchchapter
36
Renewed Habilitation, Factory Routine, Music, and Academic Trialschapter
37
Paul Wittek and the Austrian Rundschauchapter
38
Paul Wittek and the New Austrian Rundschauchapter
39
Ludwig von Mises and the Mises Seminarchapter
40
The Friedjung Society and Historical Controversieschapter
41
The Geistkreis, Spiritual Encounters, and the Geistkreis Lecture Notechapter
42
Two Books and Two Lectures: Biography, Austria, and Alexander von Hübnerchapter
43
Hübner’s Historical Method, Diaries, and Chosen Gapschapter
44
Anton Prokesch-Osten: Biography, Friends, Greece, Orient, and Aristocratic Historychapter
45
Viennese Habilitation Circle and Karl Seitz’s Political Personachapter
46
Cavour Lecture, Salata, Venice Risorgimento Congress, and Appointment to Romechapter
47
Opening Lecture in Rome on Italy in Austrian Statesmenchapter
48
Teaching, Networks, and Austrian Officials in Romechapter
49
Ludwig Curtius, Art-Historical Vision, and the Anschlusschapter
50
Fascist Academic Rome, Mussolini, Research, and Diplomatic Social Lifechapter
51
Rome and the Anschluss Crisischapter
52
Return to Vienna, Johns Hopkins Offer, and Early Persecutionchapter
53
Aryanization and Sale of the Family Factorychapter
54
Danger, False Normality, and Kristallnacht in Viennachapter
55
Final Viennese Months, Catholic Conversion, and Departure to Switzerlandchapter
56
Switzerland, France, and England as First Stations of Exilechapter
57
Wartime England and Refugee Support before Cambridgechapter
58
Cambridge Historians and the Lord Acton Archivechapter
59
Cambridge Teaching, Refugee Scholars, Christmas, and Departurechapter
60
Arrival in America and First Success at Johns Hopkinschapter
61
Baltimore Society and the Johns Hopkins University Modelchapter
62
Lovejoy, Spitzer, and Albright at Johns Hopkinschapter
63
Greenfield, Lane, and the Johns Hopkins History Departmentchapter
64
Painter, Beard, Morison, and Faculty Life at Hopkinschapter
65
Johns Hopkins, Brüning, Historicism Lectures, and the Move to Catholic Universitychapter
66
The Sociology of Intellectual Refugees and Choices about Assimilationchapter
67
Baltimore Musical Impressions: Rachmaninoff, Bartók, and Boulangerchapter
68
Washington D.C. as an Intellectual and Physical Environmentchapter
69
The Catholic University of America: Governance, Faculty, and Academic Culturechapter
70
Graduate Students, Dissertations, and the Decline of Catholic Universitychapter
71
Washington Conversations and Social Circlechapter
72
Washington Intellectual Circles during the Warchapter
73
First Visits to Ezra Pound at St. Elizabeth and Dissertation Notechapter
74
Ezra Pound in St. Elizabeth: Carlette, Italy, and Fascismchapter
75
Pound, Mussolini, Brooks Adams, and Monetary Historytheoretical
76
Pound’s Disciples, Literary Judgments, and Final St. Elizabeth Memorieschapter
77
Eric Voegelin, Symbolic Forms, and Order and Historytheoretical
78
Arnold Toynbee, Civilizations, Myth, and World Religionstheoretical
79
Return to Europe, Austrian Emigration Politics, and Figl in Washingtonchapter
80
Leopold Figl and Émigré Figures in Washingtonchapter
81
AAUP Intellectual Life and Interdisciplinary Conferenceschapter
82
American Democracy, University Discrimination, and Segregationchapter
83
New York and the Public Librarychapter
84
Teaching Modern European History at Catholic Universitychapter
85
First Postwar Return to Europe and Archival Work in Viennachapter
86
Declining the Vienna Chair and American Support for Researchchapter
87
American and European Travels, Faulkner’s South, Alpbach, and Historians’ Congresseschapter
88
Audience with Pius XII, Resignation, and the Ocean Voyage to Europechapter
89
Reasons for Returning to Viennachapter
90
Again: Viennachapter
91
Carlette Dieschapter
92
Christianechapter
93
Trento Congress, Vienna Lectures, and Marriage to Christianechapter
94
1964–1970: The Melancholic Chapterchapter
95
The Penultimate Chapter: Loving Life, Vienna, America, and the Practice of Historychapter
96
Final Reflections on Historiography, Teaching, and a Composed Lifechapter
97
Name Index Abibliography
98
Name Index Bbibliography
99
Name Index Cbibliography
100
Name Index Dbibliography
101
Name Index Ebibliography
102
Name Index Fbibliography
103
Name Index Gbibliography
104
Name Index Hbibliography
105
Name Index I-Jbibliography
106
Name Index Kbibliography
107
Name Index Lbibliography
108
Name Index Mbibliography
109
Name Index N-Obibliography
110
Name Index P-Qbibliography
111
Name Index Rbibliography
112
Name Index Sbibliography
113
Name Index T-Übibliography
114
Name Index Vbibliography
115
Name Index W-Z and Abbreviationsbibliography
116
Publisher Advertisement for Robert A. Kann, The Restoration as a Phenomenon in Historybibliography
117
Publisher Advertisement for Hugo Hantsch, Leopold Graf Berchtoldbibliography
118
Publisher Advertisement for Karl Gladt, Imperial Dream and Royal Crownbibliography
119
Author Bibliography and Back-Cover Anecdotebibliography