Intermarium: the Baltic and the Black seas on the Polish mental maps in the interwar period

The aim of the paper is to examine and compare how the Baltic Sea on the one hand and the Black and Aegean Seas on the other were conceptualized in the Polish scholarly and political discourse in the interwar period, and how mental maps of Poland’s connection to both sea regions were constructed. Be...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Marta Grzechnik
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Romanian Association for Baltic and Nordic Studies 2014-08-01
Series:Revista Română pentru Studii Baltice şi Nordice
Subjects:
Online Access:https://f-origin.hypotheses.org/wp-content/blogs.dir/5711/files/2018/12/06.-Grzechnik.pdf
Description
Summary:The aim of the paper is to examine and compare how the Baltic Sea on the one hand and the Black and Aegean Seas on the other were conceptualized in the Polish scholarly and political discourse in the interwar period, and how mental maps of Poland’s connection to both sea regions were constructed. Because of the direct access to Baltic Sea, the link to it was more straightforward, although it was constantly questioned by German revisionist scholarship. In the south there was no territorial connection to the seas – it was to be established on the political and economic level, for example through so-called Intermarium idea. An interesting question is also to what extent the discourses connected with the Baltic and the southern European seas fell within the same discourse of the ideology of the sea, and to what extent they were contradictory or mutually exclusive.
ISSN:2067-1725
2067-225X