Konferenz
Europe between the World Wars: Call for Papers
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At 11a.m. November 18, 1918, Europe celebrated the end of the Great War.
Four years of war had left deep marks on the European continent,
transforming the international political order. Europe and the world
were then different from those that emerged from the rubble of the
conflict: on the one hand, major European empires, which had entered the
war - the Russian, German, Austro-Hungarian and Turkish-Ottoman -, had
disappeared, paving the way for the birth of new independent states such
as Austria, Hungary, Finland, Czechoslovakia and Poland; on the other
hand, Europe had been indelibly transformed with cities destroyed,
ruined crops, disrupted communications and millions of people homeless.
Across the Atlantic, the United States of America emerged as financers
of a wounded Europe, assuming themselves as the major economic and
financial power and consolidating the conviction that the "Old
Continent" was no longer the center of the world.
The 2nd Europe in the World Annual Meeting will be devoted to the
analysis, discussion and interpretation of the political, economic,
social and cultural changes occurred in Europe during the interwar period.
More information (in spanish):
http://europebetweentheworldwars.wordpress.com/