Scott O. Moore is an assistant professor of history at Eastern Connecticut State University where he teaches courses on modern European history. His research explores identity creation in the Habsburg Monarchy and how the state influenced that process. He has published articles in History of Education and Contributions to Contemporary History. He also was the recipient of a Fulbright-Mach fellowship in 2012-2013, which provided support for this project.
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Acknowledgments INTRODUCTION CHAPTER 1: The Development of Education and Civic Education in Austria CHAPTER 2: Habsburg Rulers as the Personification of Good Governance CHAPTER 3: Conceptualizing Austria and Austrians CHAPTER 4: Commemorating the Monarchy CHAPTER 5: Regulating Teachers CONCLUSION Notes Bibliography Index
"Teaching the Empire offers a new understanding of civic education in late imperial Austria, which was not too backward-looking and ineffectual to meet the challenges of growing national loyalties, as older accounts have argued. Moore shows persuasively that the state authorities expected primary and secondary schools to develop pupils' loyalties to the Habsburg state and dynasty, not in opposition to regional and national allegiances, but rather along with them in a multilayered matrix."