Book Cover

Poland and the Making of Transnational Social Science: Eastern Europe, the United States, and the Wilsonian Moment

Contributor(s): Linkiewicz, Olga (Author), Brydan, David (Editor), Reinisch, Jessica (Editor)

ISBN: 9781350463998

Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic

Hardcover
$115.00
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Pub Date: January 8, 2026

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Dust Cover

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.56" H x 9.21" L x 6.14" W ( 1.08 lbs) 224 pages

Series: Histories of Internationalism

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: This book explores the intertwined histories of internationalism and nationalism in the interwar period to examine how political demand for expert knowledge reshaped transnational networks between Eastern Europe and Anglo-American actors.

Brief description: David Brydan is a Lecturer at King's College London, UK. He was previously a postdoctoral researcher on the Reluctant Internationalists project, and then Lecturer in Modern History at Birkbeck, University of London. His first book Franco's Internationalists (2019).

Review Quotes:

"Poland and the Making of Transnational Social Science makes a major intervention in our understanding of the global migration of ideas and the ways social scientists in newly independent Poland influenced and were influenced by colleagues in the US during the interwar and early Cold War period. It focuses uniquely on questions of nationalism, minority rights, border-drawing, migration, and other pressing issues of postwar Eastern Europe, demonstrating how these issues also informed the thinking of scholars in the US on the related matters of African American civil rights, antisemitism, and the impact of migration. The study is based on extensive archival research in collections around the world and makes use of previously untapped documentation to tell a unique story." --Keely Stauter-Halsted

"In her long-anticipated book, Olga Linkiewicz tells a complex story of mutual influences between nationalism and internationalism in shaping the political imaginary of the modern social sciences. Responding intently to recent historiographic trends, Linkiewicz's study meticulously reveals and fills a gap hitherto invisible in the history of science and scholarship." --Alexej Lochmatow, Research Associate, University of Erfurt, Germany

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