Jan Musekamp is currently a Visiting Associate Professor at the University of Pittsburgh. He previously taught Eastern European History at the European University Viadrina in Frankfurt an der Oder, Germany. His first book focused on forced migrations and cultural appropriation in the Polish border city of Szczecin between 1945 and 2005. His most current research project deals with the global migrations of Ukraine's German speakers, unfolding in a time of drastically changing migration policies and shifting ideas of borders, race, and belonging.
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Dedication Acknowledgments Note on Transliteration, Place Names, Dates, and Administrative Units Introduction: The Ostbahn and European Mobilities in the Railroad Age 1. Berlin and the Ostbahn: Railroads as Vehicles of Change 2. Aleksandrow: A Border Station at the Center of Imperial Power and Polish Nationalism 3. The Vistula Bridge at Dirschau (Tczew): National in Form, Transnational in Content 4. Eydtkuhnen and Verzhbolovo: International Travel and a Continental Divide 5. Koenigsberg: At the Intersection of Land- and Seaborne Trade 6. Kaunas-Eydtkuhnen-New York: Emigration Routes 7. The First World War and its Aftermath: Cutting Lines, Creating New Links Epilogue: An Interrupted European Corridor Glossary of Place and River Names in Different Languages Bibliography Index

