FAQ

The Imagined Exiles: Slovak‑Americans and the Slovak Question during the First Czechoslovak Republic

Data publikacji: 24.07.2014

Studia Historica Gedanensia, 2014, Tom 5 (2014), s. 287-305

https://doi.org/10.4467/23916001HG.14.015.2680

Autorzy

Michael Cude
History Department, Fort Lewis College, 1000 Rim Dr, Durango, CO 81301, USA
Wszystkie publikacje autora →

Tytuły

The Imagined Exiles: Slovak‑Americans and the Slovak Question during the First Czechoslovak Republic

Abstrakt

Michael Cude’s article examines how Slovak immigrants in the United States related to their homeland, particularly on questions of national sovereignty (the ‘Slovak Question’). Free from the grip of denationalization efforts in pre-First World War Hungary, Slovak leaders in America established organizations geared toward Slovak national development and political activism, eventually leading to an effort to pressure Hungary from abroad to open up to cultural and political autonomy for the Slovaks. When the Czechoslovak independence movement was organized in exile after the outbreak of the First World War, its leaders attempted to utilize these existing Slovak-American organizations for financial, military, and diplomatic support. This campaign pushed many Slovak‑Americans to absorb a sense of direct influence on the affairs of their homeland, and, consequently, it caused them ample frustration when this influence later dissipated in the First Czechoslovak Republic. In response to this frustration, Slovak-American political activists replanted their fight over the Slovak Question against the newly formed government in Prague. Although the Slovak-Americans were not a true exile group, they embraced the mentality and approach of exiles, fighting from abroad to advance Slovak national aspirations. In addition, they regularly served as proxies in support of true political exiles. In this regard, historians can view these Slovak- American national activists as “imagined exiles,” adopting the role and behaviors of an exile organization even though they were not exiles conditionally. Although stymied in their goal of Slovak autonomy within the First Czechoslovak Republic, Slovak-American efforts nonetheless facilitated the adoption of a transatlantic Slovak national activism, and contributed to an embrace of democracy as a guiding feature of Slovak national identity.

Bibliografia

Adamec J. V., “The Slovak Catholic Federation: A 65 Year Perspective,” [in:] Slovaks in America: A Bicentennial Study, ed. J.C. Krajsa, Slovak League of America, Middletown 1978, pp. 223–232.

American Slovak Association of Journalists, A Political Criminal Trial in Hungary in the Year of Our Lord 1906: The Political Criminal Trial against the Rev. Father Andrew Hlinka; The Rev. Father Joseph Tomik; Dr. Šrobar, and Others in Ruzomberk, Liptov Comitat, Hungary, American Slovak Association of Journalists, New York 1906.

“Americkí Slováci a vyklad programu Slovenskej Národnej Strany,” [in:] Dokumenty slovenskej národnej identity a štátnosti, Vol. 1, ed. J. Beňko et al., Národné literárne centrum: Dom slovenskej literatúry, 1998, pp. 406–407.

“Americký Zázrak, 13 IX 1918,” [in:] M.Hodža, Články, Reči, Študie, Vol. 2, Novina, Prague 1930.

Baumgarten R.V., Stefka J., The National Slovak Society: 100 Year History, 1890–1990, National Slovak Society, Pittsburgh 1990.

Beneš E., “Of Czechoslovak Unity” [in:]We Were and We Shall Be: The Czechoslovak Spirit through the Centuries, ed. Z. Munzer, J. Munzer, Frederick Ungar, New York 1941, pp. 164–166.

Bouša J., “Wilson and T.G. Masaryk,” Slovakia, Vol. 10, no. 6, March– April 1960, pp. 29–36.

Cude M., Transatlantic Perspectives on the Slovak Question, 1914–1948, PhD Diss., University of Colorado‑Boulder, 2013.

Čapek K., President Masaryk Tells his Story, Arno Press, New York 1978, pp. 190–194.

Čapek T., The Slovaks of Hungary: Slavs and Panslavism, The Knickerbocker Press, New York 1906.

“Club of Slovak Deputies to the SLA, 6 II 1920,” & “SLA Response to the Slovak Club, V 1920,” [in:] Memorandum of the Slovak League of America: Issued in the Name of the American Slovaks, Citizens and Residents of the United States, on behalf of the Slovaks of Hungary, Slovak League of America, 1914, pp., 4–5.

Čulen K, “Beginnings of the Slovak League in America,” [in:] Sixty Years of the Slovak League of America, ed. J. Paučo, Slovak League of America, Middletown, PA 1967, pp. 26–36.

Čulen K., History of Slovaks in America, trans. D.C. Nečas, Czechoslovak Genealogical Society, St. Paul, MN 2007.

Čulen C., Po Svätoplukovi Druhá Naša Hlava: Život Dr. Jozefa Tisu, First Catholic Slovak Union, Cleveland 1947.

Davis E., “America’s contribution to Central Europe,” The New Europe, Vol. 9, no. 112, December 1918, pp. 177–180.

“Daxner & Mamatey to Osuský, 20 X 1915,” ŠO Papers, B28, F26, HIA.

“Doc No 309, 23 V 1940,” & “Doc No 407, 9 VI 1940,” Documents on German Foreign Policy, Series D, 9, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 1947.

“Dr. Joseph Tiso to the Slovaks in America,” [in:] Slovak League of America, Correspondence in Re Slovakia and the Declaration of the Aim and Principles of the Slovak League of America, Slovak League of America, 1940, pp. 7–16.

Ference G.C., Sixteen Months of Indecision: Slovak American Viewpoints toward Compatriots and the Homeland from 1914 to 1915 as viewed by the Slovak Language Press in Pennsylvania, Susquehanna University Press, Selinsgrove1995.

Ference G.C., “Slovak Immigration to the United States in Light of American, Czech, and Slovak History,” Nebraska History, Vol. 74, Fall/Winter 1993, pp. 130–135.

Granatir J.A., Ethnic Pride, American Patriotism: Slovaks and Other New Immigrants in the Interwar Era, Temple University Press, Philadelphia 2004.

Hauner M., “Beginnings of the Czechoslovak Government in Exile 1939–1941,” [in:] Exile in and from Czechoslovakia during the 1930s and 1940s, ed. Ch. Brinson, M. Malet, Rodopi, Amsterdam 2009, pp. 103–132.

Hletko P.P., “The Slovaks and the Pittsburgh Pact,” Slovakia 1968, Vol. 18, no. 41 (1968), pp. 5–54.

“Hlinka on Scotus Viator” (Doc 109), [in:] R.W. Seton-Watson, Masaryk in England, Macmillan, New York 1943, pp. 345–353.

Hrušovsky F., “American Democracy and Slovak Life,” [in:] Sixty Years of the Slovak League of America, ed. J. Paučo, Slovak League of America, Middletown, PA 1967, pp. 9–25.

Hušek S.O., “Slovak American Fraternal, Cultural, and Civic Organizations to 1914,” [in:] Slovaks in America: A Bicentennial Study, ed. J.C. Krajsa, Slovak League of America, Middletown 1978, pp. 23–38.

“Interview with Dr. Štefan Osuský, 5 IV 1967,” Appendix III, [in:] M.M. Stolárik, “The Role of American Slovaks in the Creation of Czecho-Slovakia, 1914–1918,” Slovak Studies, Vol. 8, Historica 5 (1968), pp. 57–66.

Jamarik P., Hungary and the Future Peace Terms, Slovak League of America, Pittsburgh 1917.

Kirschbaum S.J., “The Cleveland and Pittsburgh Documents,” Slovakia 1998, Vol. 36, no 66−67, pp. 81–97.

Mamatey A., The Czecho-Slovaks: Who are They?, Slovak League of America, Pittsburgh 1919.

Mamatey A., The Situation in Austria‑Hungary, Clark University Press, Worcester, MA 1915.

Mamatey V.S., Building Czechoslovakia in America: 1914–1918, SVU Publications, Washington D.C.: 1976.

Mamatey V.S., “The Slovaks and Carpatho-Ruthenians,” [in:] The Immigrants’ Influence on Wilson’s Peace Policies, ed. J.P. O’Grady, University of Kentucky Press, Lexington 1967, pp. 230–234.

Mamatey V. S., “The United States and Czechoslovak Independence,” [in:]Czechoslovakia: Crossroads and Crises, 1918–1988, St. Martin’s Press, New York 1989.

Masaryk T.G., Masaryk on Thought and Life: Conversations with Karel Čapek, Reprint edition, trans. M. & R. Weatherall, Arno Press, New York 1971.

Masaryk T.G., The Making of a State: Memories and Observations, 1914–1918, trans. H. Steed, George Allen & Unwin, London 1927.

Masaryk T.G., The New Europe: The Slav Standpoint, New Edition, ed. W. P. Warren, W.B. Weist, Bucknell University Press, Lewisburg 1972.

Matocha B.P., “Work of the Czechoslovaks in America,” Current History, Vol. 10, no.1, 2, May 1919, pp. 309–312.

Mažár I., A History of the Binghamton Slovaks: Over a period of Forty Years, 1879–1919, ed. W. Mažár Satina, trans. T. Janacek, Via Press, Phoenix 2003.

Memorandum of the Slovak League of America: Issued in the Name of the American Slovaks, Citizens and Residents of the United States, on behalf of the Slovaks of Hungary, Slovak League of America, Pittsburgh 1914.

Memorandum Slovenskej Lígy v Amerike upravené na vládu a Národné Shromaždenie Česko‑Slovenskej Republiky v záujme vtelenia Pittsburgskej Dohody do ústavy Č.‑S. Republiky, Slovak League of America, Pittsburgh 1922, pp. 3–4.

Mikuš J.A. “The Slovak League of America: A Historical Survey,” [in:] Slovaks in America: A Bicentennial Study, ed. J.C. Krajsa, Slovak League of America, Middletown 1978, pp. 39–56.

“Mobiliyačná vyhláška Milana Ratislava Štefánika v Spojených Štátoch Amerických,” [in:] Dokumenty slovenskej národnej identity a štátnosti, Vol. 1, ed. J. Beňko et al., Národné literárne centrum: Dom slovenskej literatúry, 1998, pp. 487–461.

Nebraska History, no. 74, Fall/Winter 1993, pp. 130–135.

“Nový výkrik bratov z Ameriky,” 24 II 1924, Bratislava (no. 43), [in:] J. Tiso, Prejavy a Články (1913–1938), ed. M. Fabricius, L. Suško, Historický ústav SAV, Bratislava 2002, pp. 157–159.

Odlozilik O., “The Czechs,” [in:] Immigrants’, ed. J.P. O’Grady, University of Kentucky Press, Lexington 1967, pp. 204–223.

“Ohlas Amerického Memoranda u Nás,” B:SLA, SI. Slovenská Líga v Amerike, V Záujme Pravdy!, P. Jamriška, Pittsburgh 1930.

Open Letter to Thomas G. Masaryk, President of the Czecho-Slovak Republic, Slovak Catholic Federation of America 1923.

Osuský O., “How Czecho‑Slovakia was Born,” [in:] Slovakia, ed. J. M. Kirschbaum, Slovak World Congress, Toronto 1973, pp. 81–93.

“Osuský Memoirs,” Štefan Osuský Papers (ŠO Papers), B49, F10, Hoover Institution Archives (HIA).

Osuský O., “Moje Poslanie,” [in:] S. Michálek, Diplomat Štefan Osuský: 1889–1973, Veda, Bratislava 1999, Appendix, pp. 219–226.

Pankuch J., History of the Slovaks of Cleveland and Lakewood, trans. R. Gallo, Czechoslovak Genealogical Society & Western Reserve Historical Society, Cleveland 2001.

Papers Relating to the Foreign Relations of the United States (FRUS), Theodore Roosevelt, 1902, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 1903, pp. 45–48.

Paučo J., “American Slovaks and the Beginnings of Czecho‑Slovakia,” Slovakia 1966, Vol. 16, no. 39, pp. 63–75.

Paučo J., “Furdek and Hlinka,” Furdek 1977, no. 16,, pp. 31–35.

Paučo J., “Slovaks Abroad and Their Relationship with Slovakia,” [in:] Slovakia in the 19th & 20th Centuries, ed. J. M. Kirschbaum, Slovak World Congress, Toronto 1973, pp. 333–342.

Paučo J., Slovenskí Priekopníci v Amerike, Prvá Katolícka Slovenská Jednota, Cleveland 1972.

Pergle Ch., “The Right of Czechoslovakia to Independence,” Current History, Vol. 14, no. 6, September 1921, pp. 942–943.

Pergler C., America in the Struggle for Czechoslovak Independence, Dorrance, Philadelphia 1926.

Polakovič Š, Vnuk F., Zahraničné akcie na záchranu a obnovenie slovenskej samostatnosti (1943–1948), Slovak Research Institute of America, Lakewood‑Hamilton 1988.

“Protest against Censorship and Confiscation of Slovak Publications by the Government in Slovakia,” [in:] J. Pankuch, History of the Slovaks of Cleveland and Lakewood, trans. R.
Gallo, Czechoslovak Genealogical Society & Western Reserve Historical Society, Cleveland 2001, pp. 182–186.

Raška F.D., Fighting Communism from Afar: The Council of Free Czechoslovakia, Columbia University Press, New York 2008.

“Resolution, 28 XI 1923,” [in:] J. Pankuch, History of the Slovaks of Cleveland and Lakewood, trans. R. Gallo, Czechoslovak Genealogical Society & Western Reserve Historical Society, Cleveland 2001, pp. 182–186.

Rychlík J., “The Slovak Question and the Resistance Movement During the Second World War,” [in:] Slovakia in History, ed. M. Teich et al., Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2011, pp. 193–205.

Seton-Watson R.W., Masaryk in England, Macmillan, New York 1943.

Sidor K., Andrej Hlinka, 1864–1926, Kníhtlačiarne Sv. Andreja, Bratislava 1934.

Sidor K., “The Slovak League of America and the Slovak Nation’s Struggle for Autonomy” Slovakia 1967, Vol. 17, no. 40, pp. 29–62.

“Stanislaus Morávek to Seton‑Watson” (Doc 43), [in:] R.W. Seton-Watson and His Relations with the Czechs and Slovaks: Documents, 1906–1951, Vol. 1, ed. J.Rychlík, T.D. Marzik, M. Bielik, Ústav T.G. Masaryka; Martin, Slovakia: Matica Slovenská, Prague 1995.

Stasko J., Slovaks in the United States of America: Brief Sketches of their History, National Heritage and Activities Good Books, Cambridge, Ont, Canada 1974.

Stodola E., Prelom: Spomienky, Úvahy, Štúdie, L. Mazáč, Prahe 1933.

Stolárik M.M., “The Role of American Slovaks in the Creation of Czecho-Slovakia, 1914–1918,” Slovak Studies, Vol. 8, Historica 5 (1968), pp. 7–82.

Stolárik M.M., “The Slovak League of America and the Canadian League in the Struggle for the Self‑determination of the Nation, 1907–1992,” Slovakia 2007, Vol. 39, no. 72−73, pp. 7–35.

Šrobár V., Z Môjho Života, Fr. Borovy, Prague 1946.

“Šrobár to Mamatey, X 1919,” [in:] V. Šrobár, Oslobodené Slovensko: Pamäti z Rokov 1918–1920, Vol. 2, Academic Electronic Press, Bratislava 2004, pp. 190–197.

“T.G. Masaryk on the Pittsburgh Agreement” (Doc 30) [in:]Slovakia: A Political and Constitution History (with Documents), ed. J.A. Mikuš, Slovak Academic Press, Bratislava 1995, pp. 209–210.

“The Ambassador to Italy (Page) to SoS,” [in:] FRUS, 1918, World War I Supplement 1, V1, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C.: 1933, pp. 800–801.

The Osuský, Stefan Papers (ŠO Papers), General/Multiethnic Collection, Immigration History Research Center (IHRC), University of Minnesota, B1, F8.

Tomek P., “The Highs and Lows of Czech and Slovak Émigré Activism,” [in:] Anti‑Communist Minorities in the U.S.: Political Activism of Ethnic Refugees, ed. I. Zake, Palgrave Macmillan, New York 2009, pp. 109–126.

“United States Recognizes the Czechoslovak National Council,” & “Declaration of Independence of the Czechoslovak Nation,” [in:]The Birth of Czechoslovakia, ed. C. Jesina, Czechoslovak National Council of America, Washington D.C. 1968, pp. 74, 100.

“Vianoce Matičnej Delegácie,” Slovensko, Vol. 2, no. 5−6, January−February 1936, pp. 87–88.

Informacje

Informacje: Studia Historica Gedanensia, 2014, Tom 5 (2014), s. 287-305

Typ artykułu: Oryginalny artykuł naukowy

Tytuły:

Polski:

The Imagined Exiles: Slovak‑Americans and the Slovak Question during the First Czechoslovak Republic

Angielski:

The Imagined Exiles: Slovak‑Americans and the Slovak Question during the First Czechoslovak Republic

Autorzy

History Department, Fort Lewis College, 1000 Rim Dr, Durango, CO 81301, USA

Publikacja: 24.07.2014

Status artykułu: Otwarte __T_UNLOCK

Licencja: Żadna

Udział procentowy autorów:

Michael Cude (Autor) - 100%

Korekty artykułu:

-

Języki publikacji:

Angielski