hungarian history

graduate 世界杯2022赛程表淘汰赛 present at congress of humanities and social sciences

congratulations to ma 世界杯2022赛程表淘汰赛 yawei zhang, peter delorenzi, and michael mcneil who presented papers in june at the annual meeting of the hungarian studies association of canada, which was part of the congress of humanities and social sciences held at the university of british columbia.

yawei (alex) zhang's paper looked at “the house of terror museum and the politics of memory in post-communist hungary.” peter delorenzi discussed “empire and the jewish experience in early twentieth-century hungary.” michael mcneil presented a paper on “franz nopcsa and the future of empire: the balkans and beyond.”

this was the first academic conference for all three, and they represented themselves and the department very well.

new publication explores post-world war i austrian burgenland

assistant professor steven jobbitt’s latest publication explores the role that geographical knowledge production played in the post-world war i “discovery” of austrian burgenland. co-written with ferenc jankó of the university of west-hungary, sopron, "making burgenland from western hungary: geography and the politics of identity in interwar austria" appears in the current issue of hungarian cultural studies.

abstract: this study explores the role that geographical knowledge production played in the post-world war i “discovery” of austrian burgenland, focusing in particular on the relationship between geographical discourse and the politics of identity formation in the 1920s and 1930s. the primary task is to offer insight into this knowledge-making process by highlighting the discursive strategies employed in a variety of scholarly and popular texts, and by shedding critical light on the various actors and epistemic communities responsible for the imagining of burgenland from its annexation to austria in 1921 to the dissolution of the region and its subsequent re-invention as a greater german border zone after the nazi anschluss of 1938. as jankó and jobbitt argue, burgenland’s discovery between the wars was both figurative and literal. whether the “discoverers” were austrian or german, national or local, burgenland was as much a discursive concept as it was a physical reality. its emergent identity as a region, therefore, much like its actual borders, was fluid and often contested.

reference: ferenc jankó and steven jobbitt. "making burgenland from western hungary: geography and the politics of identity in interwar austria." hungarian cultural studies 10 (2017): 14-40. doi: 10.5195/ahea.2017.313

new publication examines the question of academic relevancy in communist hungary

1 august 2014 - thunder bay

steven jobbitt's latest publication examines the question of academic relevancy in communist hungary between 1948 to 1962. "scholarly production in desperate times: ferenc fodor and the question of academic relevancy in communist hungary, 1948-1962" appears in földrajz- és földtudomány az eötvös collegiumban (geography and earth sciences at the eötvös collegium) edited by róbert győri and published by eötvös collegium.

faculty member published in prestigious hungarian journal

a new article by steven jobbitt appears in the latest edition of földrajzi közlemények, the most prestigious geographical journal in hungary. his article “emlék szatmárról – emlék fodor ferencröl: az emlékezés és az identitás földrajza fodor ferenc: 'szatmár földje, szatmár népe, szatmár élete' című művében” [memories of image of földrajzi közleménye coverszatmár, memories of ferenc fodor: memory and identity in ‘szatmár földje, szatmár népe, szatmár Élete’] employs postmodern theory to examine the complex existential relationship between memory and the negotiation of identity during the early communist period in hungary.

to read the article go to http://foldrajzitarsasag.hu/downloads/foldrajzi_kozlemenyek_2013_137_evf_4_szam.pdf

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