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         Hungarian Literature:     more books (100)
  1. Hungarian Writers and Literature: Modern Novelists, Critics, and Poets by Joseph Reményi, 1964
  2. Hungarian Writers & Literature by Joseph Remenyi
  3. Hungarian History and Literature: Classification Schedule, Classified Listing by Call Number, Chronological Listing, Author and Title (Widener Library Shelflist; 44) by Harvard University Library, 1973-12
  4. Cleveland State University Lecture Series in Hungarian History, Literature, arts and Sciences by Ilona Sandor & Ilon Vasko, 1985
  5. History of Hungarian literature, by Tibor Klaniczay, 1964
  6. Imre Kertesz And Holocaust Literature (Comparative Cultural Studies)
  7. Old Hungarian Literary Reader: 11Th-18th Centuries
  8. Verdad Y Mentiras En La Literatura / Truth and Lies in Literature (El Dia Siguiente / the Next Day) by Stephen Vizinczey, 2005-03
  9. Short-Title Catalogue of Hungarian Books Printed Before 1851 in the British Library by Geoffrey Arnold, 1995-07
  10. Ocean at the Window: Hungarian Prose and Poetry Since 1945
  11. Literature and Political Change: Budapest, 1908-1918 (Transactions of the American Philosophical Society) by Mario D. Fenyo, 1988-01
  12. Blessed Harbours: An Anthology of Hungarian-Canadian Authors (Prose Series 65) by John Miska, 2002-06-01
  13. Ferenc Molnar and the Austro-Hungarian 'Fin De Siecle' (Austrian Culture, Vol 5) by Istvan Varkonyi, 1992-12
  14. In the Footsteps of Orpheus: The Life and Times of Miklos Radnoti (Jewish Literature and Culture) by Zsuzsanna Ozsvath, Miklos Radnoti, 2001-01

61. Hungarian Literature - History And Criticism | Harry W. Schwartz Bookshops
hungarian literature History and criticism hungarian literature - History and criticism.
http://www.schwartzbooks.com/cgi-bin/category/1531255
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Autographed! Click Photo For Info eNewsletter: Subscribe Home LITERARY CRITICISM > Hungarian literature - History and criticism Change Sort Order Publication Date Alphabetically: A-Z Alphabetically: Z-A Price: Low to High Price: High to Low Showing 1-4 of 4 matches. Page Product Details click for more info Imre Kertesz And Holocuast Literature by: Louise O. Vasvari See more by Louise O. Vasvari Paperback (Paperback) Schwartz Price: $34.95

62. Hungarian Literature - Translations Into English | Harry W. Schwartz Bookshops
hungarian literature Translations into English hungarian literature - Translations into English.
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Autographed! Click Photo For Info eNewsletter: Subscribe Home LITERARY CRITICISM > Hungarian literature - Translations into English Change Sort Order Publication Date Alphabetically: A-Z Alphabetically: Z-A Price: Low to High Price: High to Low Showing 0-0 of matches. I'm sorry, there are no products matching your criteria. Please try again. Showing 0-0 of matches. I'm sorry, there are no products matching your criteria. Please try again. Sorry, no results were found. Please try again or you may try our advanced search Contact Policies Reading Groups Publishers Weekly Bookseller of the Year, 2004

63. Transcript (English)
Now is the Time to Speak! says Eszter Babarczy in the wake of Imre Kertész s Nobel Prize Tim Wilkinson who will publish hungarian literature?
http://www.transcript-review.org/sub.cfm?lan=en&id=168

64. Library Of Congress Information Bulletin - July / August 2002
Basa will research hungarian literature as useful and didactic as well as As series editor of hungarian literature for the Twayne World Authors Series
http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/02078/kluge_fellows.html
July / August 2002
Staff Scholars Two New Kluge Fellows Selected By PEGGY PEARLSTEIN Brian P. Taves, a senior cataloger in the Motion Picture, Broadcasting, and Recorded Sound Division (MBRS), and Eniko M. Basa, a senior cataloger in the Serial Record Division, have been selected as the Library’s next Kluge Staff Fellows. Beginning on Oct. 1, Taves and Basa will begin their residency in the Library’s Kluge Center for a period of up to 12 months. Normally, the Kluge Center awards only one Kluge Staff Fellowship annually, but this year, Librarian of Congress James H. Billington concurred with the outside review committee’s suggestion that more than one staff fellowship be awarded because the quality of the applicant pool was so high, said Carolyn Brown, assistant librarian for library services. Taves will research the papers of producer, director, screenwriter and actor Thomas Harper Ince (1882-1924). The papers, which are held in the Manuscript Division, were opened for examination two years ago. The collection contains 13,000 items, spans the years 1913-1964, and documents Ince’s work as a producer as well as the business and legal dealings following his death. Supervising the production of some 800 films in 15 years, Ince played an important role in the transformation of Hollywood into an industry. He departmentalized each activity, allowing for detailed advance planning and budgeting to minimize unexpected costs. Because much of his celluloid output has been lost, the most appropriate method of chronicling Ince’s importance to the creation of the industry is to use his papers to compile a business history.

65. Complete Review - Links To (Inter)national Literary Sites At The Complete Review
Some information on hungarian literature. The Hungarian Quarterly. Some material about hungarian literature. Next Page Foundation.
http://www.complete-review.com/links/spelinks.htm
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66. Chapter 7
(hungarian literature before the XVIth century) It is a remarkable fact that, while hungarian literature is hardly known outside its country of origin,
http://www.hungarian-history.hu/lib/timeless/chapter07.htm
Timeless Nation 7. THE UNKNOWN BARDS (Hungarian literature before the XVIth century) Hungarians take pride in many artistic and historical achievements. While some of these claims may be somewhat exaggerated, the unbiased observer cannot help finding at least two fields in which the genius of this unique people has created values equal to the greatest human achievements. These are the fields of music and poetry. But while Liszt, Kodaly and Bartok are known universally, as their art does not require translation, the creation of the Hungarian poets appeals only to the speakers of Hungarian and to the few foreigners who have learnt the language. Heine, the great German lyric poet of the XIXth century, learnt the language with the sole aim of reading Hungarian poetry. Very few foreigners feel such a strong motivation nowadays. For the others translations offer the only access to Hungarian literature. When translated, however, Hungarian poetry loses much of its characteristic flavor: its rich imagery, the impact of its figures of speech, the easy flow of its flexible vocabulary, the musicality of its alliterations and assonances and the wide spectrum of decorative adjectives. The harmonious sequence of the clear vowels and melodious consonants together with the unusual rhythm caused by the accentuation of the first syllable in each word produce the impression of a cool, pure, harshly beautiful musical language, somewhat reminiscent of the untamed freshness of the folksong. The same applies, to some extent, to prose. Historic novels, the most popular genre in Magyar prose, are just as difficult to translate as poetry. Jokai, Gulacsy, Makkai and Fury wrote epic poetry in prose form. The enjoyment of their art not only requires a knowledge of the imagery and semantics of the language, but also a deep understanding of the emotional patriotism of the Hungarians and, by the same token, some knowledge of their history: the bitter pride and sorrow of their romantic Christianity and their constant struggle in the defense of an ungrateful Europe.

67. Timeless Nation
IN THE MIDST OF ARMS (hungarian literature and the arts in the XVlth LOVE, LIFE AND LIBERTY - (hungarian literature between 1848 and 1910); 24.
http://www.hungarian-history.hu/lib/timeless2/
Bodolai Z.: Timeless Nation This version is available as a series of PDF files. The HTML version is available here
    Part 1
    • Preface: The Timeless Nation
    • Introduction: The Unsung Saga
    • 1. THE MILLENIAL QUEST - The origins and migrations of the Hungarians
    • 2. "A WAY OF LIFE" - The Hungarian character
    • 3. ANCIENT ECHO - The origins and development of Hungarian folk music
    Part 2
    • 4. THE SETTLEMENT - (The occupation of the Carpathian basin. The IXth-Xth centuries)
    • 5. THE CROSS AND THE SWORD - (Christian Hungary under the Arpad kings: 1000-1301)
    • 6. I HIDE IN SONGS... - (The ancient roots of Hungarian folk poetry)
    Part 3
    • 7. THE UNKNOWN BARDS - (Hungarian literature before the XVIth century)
    • 8. THE MAGNIFICENT TWILIGHT - (The era of the Anjou and Luxembourg Kings)
    • 9. DARKNESS AFTER NOON - (Hungary’s history from 1456 to 1540)
    Part 4
    • 10. THE SPLENDOUR THAT WAS... - (Hungarian art before the sixteenth century)
    • 11. WHERE EAST IS WEST - (The people, customs and folk art of the Transdanubian region)
    • 12. THE SONG IN HIS HEART - (Lyric folk poetry and folksong)
    Part 5
    • 13. "BETWIXT TWO HEATHENS." - (The struggle against Turkish aggression and German oppression: the XVth -XVIIIth centuries)

68. POSTSCRIPT Of Szatmary's Kazohinia
ago by Frigyes Karinthy, Swift s alter ego in hungarian literature. Even the greatest luminaries of hungarian literature have always been tinged by some
http://www.kevius.com/kazohinia/postscript.html
POSTSCRIPT
Thomas More's Utopia and Swift's Gulliver's Travels certainly rank among the most influential gifts of the British genius. to mankind. From works of literature they have become synonymous with the eternal human parable. Utopia and Gulliver have, as elsewhere, passed into the Hungarian language as household words, common to all, though not everyone is aware of their origin. Utopia appeared not long ago, and Gulliver had been well known to Hungarian readers through adaptations for young people before the complete translation was dashed off with careless genius fifty years ago by Frigyes Karinthy, Swift's alter ego in Hungarian literature. Even the greatest luminaries of Hungarian literature have always been tinged by some national form of romanticism, and as a result the Hungarian public has had to suffer and assimilate the effects of the series of earthquakes that began around 1900 and have continued to this day before it could adapt itself to receive and reflect on the universal and philosophical implications of the two works. One of those who knew how to receive and develop these implications is a rather isolated figure among Hungarian writers, but nevertheless increasingly popular with a growing section of the reading public. He was Sándor Szathmári, the author of

69. Center For Applied Linguistics
Hungarian lyric poetry in the 19th century. Comparative literature studies (Hungarian, German, Russian, Finnish). Modern hungarian literature, Dept. of
http://lingua.arts.klte.hu/klte/kltehuc.htm
Institute of Hungarian and Comparative Literature
Comparative Literature, Dept. of Hungarian Literature of the 19th Century, Dept. of Modern Hungarian Literature, Dept. of Old Hungarian Literature, Dept. of
Comparative Literature, Dept. of Croatian and Hungarian epic poetry in the 16th and 17th centuries. English Renaissance poetry (Sidney, Spenser, Shakespeare). Russian Symbolism. The Study of Krleza's Works. The correspondences of literature and the arts at the turn of the 20th century (with special regard to Austrian and Hungarian art). Rilke and his influence on Hungarian literature. Hungarian Literature of the 19th Century, Dept. of The history of the Hungarian novel in the 19th century. The history of the Hungarian novel in verse in the 19th century. Hungarian lyric poetry in the 19th century. Comparative literature studies (Hungarian, German, Russian, Finnish). Modern Hungarian Literature, Dept. of Research of literary life works in the latest period of Hungarian literature (from 1940), Style of Hungarian literature in the 20th century, Hungarian literature in other countries (Rumania, Czech and Slovak Republics). Old Hungarian Literature, Dept. of

70. "The People Of Books": Jewish Women In The Post-Holocaust Hungarian Literature
The People of Books Jewish Women in the PostHolocaust hungarian literature. A conference organized by the Esther’s Bag(Esztertáska) Foundation on 15th
http://www.nextwave.hu/esztertaska/retorta_e.htm
" The People of Books": Jewish Women in the Post-Holocaust Hungarian Literature A conference organized by the on 15th January, at the Retorta Z'ART Galery. Louise Vasvari , a historian is talking about Edith Bruck , a journalist, will talk about a novel written by (A Strange Carnival), and In the afternoon, poets and writers, and Anna Borgos , a psychologist and literary historian will talk to and The most assiduous participants can also watch a documentary about Edit Bruck
January 15, 2005, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. (with a lunch break).
The participants of the conference can order a vegetarian buffet lunch for 999 HUF.

71. Jewish Women In Hungarian Film – Absence Or Presence?
Katalin Pécsi. Jews in hungarian literature and Film. Imre Kertész winning the Nobel Prize marked the first time a Jewish writer and Holocaust literature
http://www.nextwave.hu/esztertaska/womeninfilm.htm
Jews in Hungarian Literature and Film that Jewish literature has been accepted as part of the Hungarian literary mainstream, nor that ordinary readers would consider Kertész' novel “Sorstalanság “ (“Fateless," 1975) as part of their national heritage. More symptomatic of the reaction of at least some Hungarians to Kertész and other Jewish authors is the following example: When Hungary was presented at the Frankfurt Book Fair a couple of years ago , a former Hungarian writer and current right-wing politician published a list of writers invited to Frankfurt whom he did not consider “real" Hungarians. Not surprisingly, all but one (Péter Esterházy) of the names on the list were contemporary Hungarian writers of Jewish origin (Péter Nádas, Mihály Kornis, Péter Lengyel, György Dalos, and others). In addition to the fact that the Holocaust was not an officially supported topic during the communist era, the main obstacle for the development of Jewish literature in Hungary is that after decades of assimilation before and after WW II – and the devastation wrought by the Shoah – we cannot speak of a Jewish intellectual continuity in Central and Eastern Europe. While a Jewish culture based – partly or mostly – on the use of the Yiddish language flourished in Poland, Russia, etc., in the 19 th and 20 th centuries, Hungarian Jews considering themselves as an “ethnic minority" existed only as a hidden counter-culture current against the mainstream

72. Contrasting Memories, Cultural Dialogues:
Papers covering any aspects of hungarian literature and culture, alert to the implications of the question raised above, are invited.
http://personal.rhul.ac.uk/uhle/021/Contrasting Memories.htm
Cultures of Memory/ Memories of Culture:
Twentieth-Century Hungarian Literature and Culture in an Anglophone context
A conference in Debrecen, Hungary, September 10 th It has been semi-seriously proposed by baffled scientists that Hungarians are not actually native earthlings, but a super-intelligent extra-terrestrial race which has managed to blend in with humanity, only giving themselves away by the genius of their works and the absolute impenetrability of their language. Nicholas Lezard I returned from the West, and I bought home in my nostrils and nerves that benumbing lethargy, impudent hostility and arrogant superiority with which the West viewed the fate of Eastern Europe. Sándor Márai Beyond the Ruritanian clichés, beyond the somewhat dreary exoticism that totalitarianism seemed to confer on Hungarians for many observers, beyond the glamour of the sturdy little nation standing up against the mighty Russians, beyond the hangover of the cold war and dictatorship, what does it mean to read Hungarian literature and culture in and from Britain/Europe? Can critical concerns with the ‘Third World’ apply to the former ‘Second world’? What are the literary and cultural effects of European Enlargement? What literary and cultural memories are similar or divergent? The recent international critical and commercial success of a number of Hungarian novels Sándor Márai’s Embers , Péter Nádas’s Book of Memories , and Antal Szerb’s Traveller and Moonlight – and the awarding of the Nobel Prize to Imre Kertész has resulted in a heightened awareness of Hungarian literature and culture in Western Europe. Simultaneously, European enlargement adds topicality to intercultural enterprises of stock-taking and remembering such as the one undertaken by this conference.

73. Calls For Papers: CFP: 20th-C. Hungarian Literature And Culture
mean to read hungarian literature and culture in and from Britain/Europe? Can critical concerns with the Third World apply to the former Second world ?
http://cfp.english.upenn.edu/archive/2004-04/0009.html
CFP: 20th-C. Hungarian Literature and Culture in an Anglophone Context (Hungary) (6/15/04; 9/10/04)
From: Eaglestone R ( R.Eaglestone@rhul.ac.uk
Date: Tue Mar 30 2004 - 08:59:39 EST Cultures of Memory/ Memories of Culture:
Twentieth-Century Hungarian Literature and Culture in an Anglophone context
A conference in Debrecen, Hungary, September 10th 2004
It has been semi-seriously proposed by baffled scientists
that Hungarians are not actually native earthlings, but a super-intelligent
extra-terrestrial race which has managed to blend in with humanity, only
giving themselves away by the genius of their works and the absolute
impenetrability of their language.
- Nicholas Lezard
I returned from the West, and I bought home in my nostrils and nerves that benumbing lethargy, impudent hostility and arrogant

74. Basic
Aims and content Getting acquainted with hungarian literature (prose and poetry). Two courses on different areas of hungarian literature, 1 Finnish cr.
http://www.jyu.fi/hungarologia/basic.htm
BASIC STUDIES Basic studies are divided into two options: Hungarian Language Studies and Hungarian Cultural Studies. The aim of the basic studies is to provide the students with a good knowledge of the Hungarian language and culture, and this is why several courses are compulsory in both options. To an extent, it is already possible at this stage for the students to orientate towards either the language or the culture of Hungary. Please note that the two options have different codes for the same courses. In the following course unit descriptions, the code for Hungarian Language Studies is given first. I HUNGARIAN CULTURE: 7 Finnish cr. / 10.5 ECTS cr. Compulsory courses : 5 Finnish cr. / 7.5 ECTS cr. HUN P80 / P10 HUNGARIAN FOLK CULTURE , 2 Finnish cr. / 3 ECTS cr. Compulsory in both options. Aims and content: An introduction to the folklore and folk arts of Hungary. Includes two respective sections, 1 Finnish cr./1.5 ECTS cr. each. Prerequisites: None. Duration: 2 h/week, one or two terms. Alternatively, lecture periods on either one section or both. Mode of study: Lectures or independent study.

75. Proengl
hungarian literature in the 20th century, HUNS2324; Ágnes Pasztercsák and Imre Bartis Address it to Department of Literature/ Hungarian Studies.
http://www.jyu.fi/hungarologia/proengl.htm
COURSE INFORMATION Spring 2005 COURSES EXAMINATION EACH ONE TEACH ONE (N.B.: All classes start 15 minutes past the hour and two-hour lectures end 15 minutes to the hour.) N.B. Unkarin huone is located in Fennicum (F-building) downstairs at the end of the corridor. LANGUAGE COURSES The language courses start on week 3. Hungarian for beginners, HUNS11-13 ; Ágnes Pasztercsák no course this semester Hungarian for beginners, course 2 HUNS11-13 ; Ágnes Pasztercsák Mon 14-16 and Wed 8.30-10 (from week 6 on Monday’s class on Thu 8.45-10.15) Unkarin huone Hungarian for intermediate students, HUNS11-13 ; Ágnes Pasztercsák Wed 14-16 and Thu 12-14 Unkarin huone Hungarian for intermediate students, course 2, HUNS11-13 Ágnes Pasztercsák Wed 12-14 Unkarin huone Discussion course, HUNS15 ; Adrienn Abonyi-Karhunen Tue 14-16 CO URSES Hungarian literature in the 20 th century, HUNS23-24; Ágnes Pasztercsák and Imre Bartis Thu January 20 th 16-18, after that on Mon 16-18 Unkarin huone The structure of Hungarian, HUNS17; Petteri Laihonen Wed 14-16, begins on Jan 19

76. American Hungarian Educators' Association (AHEA)
A nyugati magyar irodalom költök, (hungarian literature in Western Europe Reception and Criticism of Modern hungarian literature in Yugoslavia,
http://www.magyar.org/ahea/index.php?halid=11&menuid=104

77. Study Abroad
hungarian literature in Central European Context. Program B (For students with some Hungarian language) Overview of the History of hungarian literature
http://www.dyc.edu/academics/study_abroad.asp?id=1

78. Study Guide > Uni Wien > Fields Of Study > A066853 Hungarian Literature, Master
hungarian literature, master programme FinnoUgric Linguistics, master programme. A066853 hungarian literature, master programme. weitere Standorte
http://www.studyguide.at/univie/studieren/philku/A066853.html?klapp=12

79. 02W HUNGRN 121:Lec 1 Survey Of Hungarian Literature In Translation
HUNGRN 121 Lec 1 Survey of hungarian literature in Translation Library Reserves Registrar s Schedule of Classes Slavic Languages and Literatures.
http://ecampus.humnet.ucla.edu/classes/hungrn121_lec1_02w/
E-Campus Resources My E-Campus E-Campus Help E-Campus Class Web Sites E-Campus Acceptable Use and Privacy Policies Other Resources My UCLA UCLA Home Page Humanities Home Page Welcome to:
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Survey of Hungarian Literature in Translation
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Information about the Class: Faculty: TAs: BIRNBAUM, M.D.
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Textbooks ... Slavic Languages and Literatures

80. Lotz-Prize Winners
Viljo Tervonen, the first director of the Hungarian Institute of Helsinki University, and a promoter of hungarian literature and culture in Finland
http://www.bibl.u-szeged.hu/filo/dijak/elotz.html
magyarul Home Page International Association of Hungarian Studies
Lotz-Prize Winners
  • In 1981, at the I. International Congress of Hungarian Studies: retired professor of Hungarian at Warsaw University, and an outstanding representative of Hungarian studies in Poland Eva Martins, a former student of John Lotz, and professor Olga Penavin, Vladimir Milauer, retired professor of the Charles University in Prague Viljo Tervonen, the first director of the Hungarian Institute of Helsinki University, and a promoter of Hungarian literature and culture in Finland retired professor of Hungarian at the Humboldt University in Berlin and a distinguished scholar of 18th century Hungarian culture
  • In 1986, at the II. International Congress of Hungarian Studies: Karlheinz Mack, Jean-Luc Moreau, professor at the Sorbonne in Paris and a distinguished translator and promoter of Hungarian literature in France Pauline Palmeos, lecturer at the Finno-Ugrian Department of the Tartu State University, and a distinguished teacher of Hungarian language and literature Albert Tezla
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