Imagining the Urban Poland: Revolution and Reconceptualization of Urban Society in the Kingdom of Poland, 1905‒1914
Imagining the Urban Poland: Revolution and Reconceptualization of Urban Society in the Kingdom of Poland, 1905‒1914
Author(s): Kamil ŚmiechowskiSubject(s): Political history, Social history, Rural and urban sociology, Pre-WW I & WW I (1900 -1919), History of Antisemitism, Inter-Ethnic Relations, Peace and Conflict Studies
Published by: Uniwersytet Adama Mickiewicza
Keywords: antisemitism; intelligentsia; Łódź; mieszczaństwo (burghers); modernization; urban society; Warsaw;
Summary/Abstract: The aim of this article is to analyze how the concept of mieszczaństwo was redefined in Polish political discourse between 1905 and 1914 in conjunction with concepts of intelligentsia and bourgeoisie. My hypothesis is that before the Great War, in a time of powerful social and political revolutions that took place on the streets of Warsaw, Łódź and other cities, new ways of conceptualizing the urban society emerged. I shall discuss the circumstances that led to the forming of the concept of the Polish mieszczaństwo during the debate about the urban self-government in the Kingdom of Poland after the 1905 Revolution. As the city itself became the subject of political competition, and the right to govern the city became a demand of the Polish public opinion. For National Democratic Party it was an excellent occasion to expand anti-Semitic rhetoric and promote the idea of the Polonization of cities as a long-term goal. However, I argue that this rhetoric would not find public response if the intelligentsia itself would not redefined its attitude to other groups of urban dwellers. The mieszczaństwo, which had no political meaning previously, became the main factor of the imagined modernization of Poland. Despite the price of the ethnic conflict it became obvious that Poland had to be urbanized to be modernized.
Journal: Praktyka teoretyczna
- Issue Year: 2021
- Issue No: 39
- Page Range: 95-118
- Page Count: 24
- Language: English