Academic journal dedicated to publishing scholarship on contemporary and historical issues related to Hungary. Published by Penn State University Press.
There's also a primary source on Deák's expulsion from Hungary in 1945 and an interview with philosopher Charles Taylor. And Katalin Fábián has a review essay on recent books on Hungarian authoritarianism.
Three years later, it's finally happening! There will be two in-person book talks on Borders on the Move next week: Monday, September 25 at 17:40 at CEU in Vienna and Tuesday, September 26 at 11 at the Történettudományi Intézet in Budapest. If you are in the area, please come!
Join us tomorrow at 12pm EST for a discussion of Máté Rigó's Capitalism in Chaos with discussant Cristina Florea! Register here: https://t.co/S2BOC5TI7F
Join us tomorrow at 12pm EST for a discussion of Máté Rigó's Capitalism in Chaos with discussant Cristina Florea! Register here: https://t.co/S2BOC5TI7F
Get yourself a copy of @KindKovacs's Budapest's Children and join us for her virtual book talk this Thursday, March 30 at 12:30pm with discussant Paul Hanebrink. Please DM for Zoom link!
Get yourself a copy of @KindKovacs's Budapest's Children and join us for her virtual book talk this Thursday, March 30 at 12:30pm with discussant Paul Hanebrink. Please DM for Zoom link!
Join us Thursday, March 30 at 12:30pm EST for a virtual book talk with Friederike Kind-Kovács @KindKovacs author of Budapest's Children: Humanitarian Relief in the Aftermath of the Great War, with discussant Paul Hanebrink. DM for Zoom login info!
Today at 12:30pm EST, Hungarian Studies Association is hosting a virtual book talk for Maya Nadkarni's "The Remains of Socialism." DM for the Zoom login info!
Today at 12:30pm EST, Hungarian Studies Association is hosting a virtual book talk for Maya Nadkarni's "The Remains of Socialism." DM for the Zoom login info!
Call for Papers for Hungarian Studies Review's 50th anniversary issue: The History of Property Regimes in Hungary. Deadline: January 15, 2023. https://t.co/4Zke9vTgfK
HSR's editorial team is soliciting submissions for a special issue on property regimes in Hungary. Contact our managing editor @leslie_H2Os for more info!
Call for Papers for Hungarian Studies Review's 50th anniversary issue: The History of Property Regimes in Hungary. Deadline: January 15, 2023. https://t.co/4Zke9vTgfK
In the interwar period, #Hungary aggressively pursued a policy of cultural diplomacy, of which one significant element was “representative” art exhibitions, hosted in a variety of European cities.
Samuel Albert shares new research on Fri, 10/28 at 12pm: https://t.co/mYEtXNkvyq
HSR is seeing authors for our 50th anniversary issue on the history of property regimes in Hungary. Pitch us an idea--we'd love to hear from first-time authors, interdisciplinary scholars, anybody interested in Hungarian Studies. See link below for further details!
Call for Papers for Hungarian Studies Review's 50th anniversary issue: The History of Property Regimes in Hungary. Deadline: January 15, 2023. https://t.co/4Zke9vTgfK
@tkinias@JohannaMellis@AndrewBehrendt but rather that empires are a western European problem that doesn't apply to them. It is a common rationale for not accepting refugees, the argument being that the west created this situation so they should deal with it. So in a way denial of empire can be just as problematic