Research and Teaching Interests:
Modern Europe, Eastern Europe and Habsburg history, European Gender, War and Society, Comparative Nationalism. Personal Statement:
My work has focused primarily on early nationalism in Central Europe, particularly within the Habsburg Empire. I am interested in the way national and nationalist rhetoric and activities were integrated into daily life, as well as how national identity and status interacted. I am completing a book manuscript on this now, and have begun a second project that looks at status and identity not from the national perspective, but from the gender perspective. I teach courses on modern Europe, Eastern Europe, nationalism, Habsburg history, and gender and war.
Representative Publications:
“Mediating Progress in the Provinces: Central Authority, Local Elites, and Agrarian Societies in Bohemia and Moravia,” Austrian History Yearbook, no. 35, 2004, pp. 49-79.
“Nationalizing the Public,” in Culture and Nation in Central and Eastern Europe, eds. John-Paul Himka et al, (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2000), pp. 359-372.
“‘In this Amiable Society’: Austrian and Bohemian Noblewomen at the Interstices of the Enlightenment,” paper presented at British 18th Century Studies Conference, Queen’s College, Cambridge, January 4-6, 2002.
“King and Mother: Power and Gender in the Iconography of Maria Theresa,” Gender Studies Program, European University Institute, October 18, 2000.
Notes:
Professor Krueger has received research support from the European University Institute, the American Council of Learned Societies, the Krupp Foundation, the Fulbright Commission, and IREX.
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