The Emperor and the Executioner: Capital Punishment in the Habsburg Monarchy

Event time: 
Friday, February 15, 2019 - 12:00pm to 1:20pm
Location: 
Grace Hopper College (GH) See map
189 Elm Street
New Haven, CT 06511
Event description: 

The workshop will meet regularly on Fridays during term to discuss pre circulated papers. The papers will represent the cutting edge of scholarship at the interface between historically inflected work between the humanities and the social sciences. Each workshop will begin with the response from an affiliated graduate student to be followed by lively and free ranging discussion.

Co-Sponsored with the Early Modern Empires Workshop

Light lunch to be served 11:30-12:00PM.

Alison Frank Johnson is a Professor of History at Harvard University. Johnson’s teaching and research focus on the history of central and eastern Europe and the region’s interactions with the rest of the world in the modern period. She teaches courses on late imperial Vienna; commodities in international history; on German history in the broadest sense of the phrase; on the Habsburg Empire and its successor states in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Her first book, Oil Empire: Visions of Prosperity in Austrian Galicia (2005), was awarded the Barbara Jelavich 2006 Book Prize, the Austrian Cultural Forum 2006 Book Prize, and the Polish Studies Association 2006 Orbis Book Prize. She is currently working on two concurrent projects. The first investigates Austria-Hungary’s engagement with maritime commerce in the long nineteenth century. The second traces nearly two centuries of ambivalence about capital punishment in the Habsburg Monarchy and the Republic of Austria: Habsburgs were among the first European rulers to abolish the death penalty in the 18th-century. After periods of reintroduction, haphazard application, partial abolition, and systematic implementation, capital punishment was only completely eliminated in Austria in 1968. Additional interests include the transformation of the Alpine environment and the Mediterranean slave trade. Frank Johnson offers general exam fields in German-speaking Europe, Eastern and/or Central Europe, and European Environmental History.

Alison Frank Johnson

203-432-0061