The Revolution of the Black Diamond Republic: Negotiating Socialism and Autonomy in the Jiu Valley, 1918-1919

IF 1.3 3区 社会学 Q1 AREA STUDIES
Anca Glont
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Scholars frequently portray the end of the Habsburg Monarchy as driven by nationalist revolutions in the provinces. The experience of the Jiu Valley, Transylvania’s largest coal basin, demonstrates that nationalism was neither the only basis for revolution nor the most popular in all parts of the province. The multiethnic working class of Jiu embraced revolution as a response to state failures to provide basic services in a worsening wartime economy, even as state demand for coal rose. The miners created the Black Diamond Republic in October 1918 as Austro-Hungarian armies collapsed in an effort to actively negotiate their status after the war. The miners embraced revolution not as a bid for independence or ethnic secession but as a means to maintain local union power and negotiate the conditions of their inclusion in either Romania or Hungary. While “Romanian” and “Hungarian” councils were formed, such identities in Jiu were also linked to occupation (worker, peasant, or intellectual) rather than clear definitions of ethnicity.
黑钻石共和国的革命:谈判社会主义和自治在九谷,1918-1919
学者们经常把哈布斯堡王朝的终结描述为由各省的民族主义革命推动的。特兰西瓦尼亚最大的煤矿盆地久谷的经验表明,民族主义既不是革命的唯一基础,也不是该省所有地区最受欢迎的基础。在战时经济日益恶化的情况下,尽管国家对煤炭的需求有所增加,但政府未能提供基本服务,多民族的九州工人阶级将革命视为对此的回应。1918年10月,当奥匈帝国军队在战后积极谈判他们地位的努力中崩溃时,矿工们创建了黑钻石共和国。矿工们拥抱革命,不是为了争取独立或民族分裂,而是为了维持当地工会的权力,并就他们被纳入罗马尼亚或匈牙利的条件进行谈判。虽然成立了“罗马尼亚”和“匈牙利”委员会,但这些身份在Jiu也与职业(工人,农民或知识分子)有关,而不是明确的种族定义。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
16.70%
发文量
137
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