Sissi\'s World offers a transdisciplinary approach to the study of the Habsburg Empress Elisabeth of Austria.
She is the author of Nostalgia After Nazism: History, Home and Affect in German and Austrian Literature and Film (2010)..
Her research focuses on the German Enlightenment and its critique, kinship and family structures, post-war German and Austrian literature and film, and queer and gender studies.
Heidi Schlipphacke is Associate Professor of Germanic Studies at the University of Illinois at Chicago, USA.
Her major works include In the Name of Italy (2012) and Making Trieste Italian, 1918-1954 (2005), and she co-edited Jewish Intellectual Women in Central Europe, 1860-2000 (2012).
Her research explores the history of Trieste and the northeastern Adriatic regions since the late 19th century with emphasis on the intersections of politics, culture, economy, law, religion, gender, and ethnicity and nationalism.
Hametz is Professor of History at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia, USA.
About the Author Maura E.
This collection will go beyond the popular biographical accounts, recountings of her mythic beauty, and scattered studies of her well-known eccentricities to offer transdisciplinary cultural perspectives across art, film, fashion, history, literature, and media.
Despite the continuing fascination with "the beloved Sissi," the Habsburg empress, her impact, and legacy have received scant attention from scholars.
Sissi\'s World explores the cultural foundations for the endurance of the Sissi legends and the continuing fascination with the beautiful empress: a Bavarian duchess born in 1837, the longest-serving Austrian empress, and the queen of Hungary who died in 1898 at the hands of a crazed anarchist.
It investigates the myths, legends, and representations across literature, art, film, and other media of one of the most popular, revered, and misunderstood female figures in European cultural history.
Sissi\'s World offers a transdisciplinary approach to the study of the Habsburg Empress Elisabeth of Austria