Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-8kt4b Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-14T05:43:33.976Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

From Making the Glory to Facing the Decay

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 March 2020

Iván Zoltán Dénes*
Affiliation:
Henrik Marczali Research Team, Budapest, Hungary. Email: denes.ivan.zoltan@gmail.com

Abstract

What were the main characteristics of turn-of-the-twentieth-century Hungarian collective identity and memory political debates? They were no longer determined by the discourse of liberal-rights-extending assimilation, yet public speech was also not entirely determined by the ethnicist–essentialist subject matter of the interwar national characterology discourse; rather, the internal dilemma of the rights-extending assimilation was externalized. There were some who sought to advance the extension of rights in the direction of suffrage. Others held on to rights extension in the hope of assimilation and believed they could promote it through establishing institutions of public education. Others abided by rights-extending assimilation, but interpreted it in terms of individual cultural achievements. Yet others believed that their fears of historical Hungary falling apart and the decay of the national middle class could be counterbalanced by curtailing or revoking nationalities’ rights and exclusionary policies against them. This article focuses on four different types of forging a collective identity: programmes, master narratives, political languages, strategies and regimes of memory.

Type
Articles
Copyright
© Academia Europaea 2020

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References

Beksics, G (1898) I. Ferencz József és kora. In: Márki Sándor és Beksics Gusztáv: A modern Magyarország (1848-1896). Budapest: Athenaeum, pp. 395841. [A magyar nemzet története. Szerkeszti Szilágyi Sándor. Budapest: Athenaeum, Vol. X].Google Scholar
Beksics, G (1905) Mátyás király birodalma és Magyarország jövője. Budapest: Franklin.Google Scholar
Marczali, H (1898) Magyarország története III. Károlytól a Bécsi Kongresszusig (1711-1815). Budapest: Athenaeum. [A magyar nemzet története, Vol. VIII].Google Scholar
Marczali, H (1905) A nemzetiség történetbölcseleti szempontból. Budapest: Franklin Társulat. [Népszerű Főiskola Könyvtára].Google Scholar
Marczali, H (1915) Érdemleges jelentése Szekfű Gyula magántanári képesítéséről. Budapest, április 14. ELTE Egyetemi Levéltár, BK 1774/1913–1914.Google Scholar
Marczali, H (1920) A béke könyve. A múlt tanulsága. Budapest: Athenaeum.Google Scholar
Marczali, H (1921) Három nemzedék. Tanulmány Szekfű Gyula új könyvéről. Egyenlőség képes folyóirata. I, 911.Google Scholar
Réz, M (1906) Magyarság és demokrácia. Hírlapi cikkek. Budapest: Budapesti Hírlap nyomdája. Google Scholar
Réz, M (1909) Tanulmányok. Budapest: Pallas.Google Scholar
Schvarcz, G (1865) Magyar író külföldön. I-II. Pest: Heckenast Gusztáv.Google Scholar
Schvarcz, G (1879) Államintézményeink és a kor igényei. Budapest: Aigner Lajos.Google Scholar
Schvarcz, G (1886) Gondolatszabadság és ódon tömeguralom. Budapest: Magyar Tudományos Akadémia. Google Scholar
Szabó, M (2003) Az újkonzervativizmus és a jobboldali radikalizmus története (1867-1918). Budapest: Új Mandátum Könyvkiadó. Google Scholar
Szekfű, G (1922) Három nemzedék. Egy hanyatló kor története. Második kiadás. Budapest: Élet.Google Scholar

Further Reading

Bérenger, J and Kecskeméti, K (2005) Parlement et vie parlementaire en Hongrie, 1608-1918. Paris: Honoré Champion. Google Scholar
Berlin, I (1981) Against the Current. Essays in the History of Ideas. Edited with a bibliography by Henry Hardy. With an introduction by Roger Hausheer. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Dénes, IZ (2009) Conservative Ideology in the Making. Budapest; New York: Central European University Press.Google Scholar
Dénes, IZ (2010) Reinterpreting a ‘founding father’: Kossuth images and their contexts, 1848-2009. East Central Europe 37. 90117.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dénes, IZ (2019) Értelmiségi minták. Budapest: Kalligram.Google Scholar
Evans, RJW (2006) Austria, Hungary, and the Habsburgs. Central Europe c. 1683-1867. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Kecskeméti, K (2010): Le libéralisme hongrois, 1790-1848. Paris: Honoré Champion. Google Scholar
Kecskeméti, K (2011a) La Hongrie des Habsbourg, II. 1790-1914. Rennes: Presses Universitaires de Rennes (Collection Histoire). Google Scholar
Kecskeméti, K (2011b) Pour comprende l’histoire de l’ autre Europe. Recueil d’essais. Presses Rennes: Universitaires de Rennes (Collection Histoire).Google Scholar
Marczali, H (1910a) Hungary in the Eighteenth Century. Introductory essay on the earlier history of Hungary by Harold W.V. Temperley, M.A., Fellow of Peterhouse, Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Marczali, H (1910b) Ungarische Verfassungsgeschichte. Tübingen: Verlag von J.C B. Mohr (Paul Siebeck). [Das öffentliches Recht der Gegenwart].Google Scholar
Marczali, H (1911) Ungarische Verfassungsgeschichte. Tübingen: Verlag von J.C. B. Mohr (Paul Siebeck). [Das öffentliches Recht der Gegenwart].Google Scholar
Miru, G (2000) Schvarcz Gyula. Budapest: Új Mandátum. [Magyar Panteon].Google Scholar
Szabó, M (2006) The liberalism of the Hungarian nobility. In: Dénes, IZ (ed.), Liberty and the Search for Identity. Liberal Nationalisms and the Legacy of Empires. Budapest; New York: CEU Press, pp. 197237.Google Scholar
Trencsényi, B (2011) The Politics of ‘National Character’. A Study in Interwar East European Thought. Oxford; New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Trencsényi, B, Janowski, M, Baar, M, Falina, M and Kopeček, M (2016) A History of Modern Political Thought in East Central Europe. I. Negotiating Modernity in the Long Nineteenth Century. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trencsényi, B, Janowski, M, Baar, M, Falina, M and Kopeček, M (2018) A History of Modern Political Thought in East Central Europe. II/I,II. Negotiating Modernity in the ‘Short Twentieth Century’ and Beyond. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Varga, J (1993) A Hungarian Quo Vadis. Political Ideas and Conceptions in the early 1840s. Translated by Pálmai, Éva. Budapest: Akadémiai.Google Scholar