
New Books in History Claire Morelon, "Streetscapes of War and Revolution: Prague, 1914–1920" (Cambridge UP, 2024)
Feb 13, 2026
Dr. Claire Morelon, cultural and social historian of East Central Europe, reconstructs Prague’s sensory street life from 1914–1920. She traces wartime posters, uniforms, shortages, refugees, protests, and how everyday urban textures shaped the shift from empire to a new nation-state. Short, vivid scenes reveal the politics of streets, crowd practices, and lingering surprises in public memory.
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Space Over Ethnic Groups
- Focusing on urban space lets us move beyond ethnic-group narratives in Austria-Hungary.
- Streets revealed shared wartime experiences across different identities in Prague.
Streets As Political Information
- Streetscape includes built environment, signs, posters, traffic, gatherings and daily uses.
- People read visual cues on streets as political information during war and revolution.
Posters, Crowds, And New Uniformed Streets
- Mobilization posters drew crowds who discussed who would be drafted and what it meant.
- Uniforms then multiplied on Prague streets, visibly redefining civilian and military hierarchies.


