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  • East European Jewish Affairs

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  • Authors: János M. Bak;

    Based on personal memory and interviews with former classmates the author outlines the lives of 12 men from the professional middle class, who between 1939 and 1947 attended a segregated “Jewish class” of a renowned Budapest grammar school. The article follows their youth, education, survival of the Holocaust and their careers at home or abroad till the end of the twentieth century. Additionally, as far as it became known, one or two generations of ancestors, siblings, and spouses, and one or two generations of offspring are also presented. Finally, central issues of the lives of the “boys,” such as emigration, political conformism, and, above all, assimilation to the majority society will be discussed in separate chapters. These life and family histories may be regarded as typical of a not insignificant segment of Budapest Jewish society.

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  • Authors: Zsuzsa Hetényi;

    Despite the fact that the 1881/82 pogroms had a much greater effect on Jewish thinking, representing a watershed in the Jewish strategy of assimilation, the 1905 pogroms were much more widely mirrored in literature. The Silver Age period of Russian literature had a great impact on new stylistic strategies that were capable of depicting the horror and avoiding the sentimental, documentary or didactic extremities. The following article discusses what new ways were found by S. An‐sky, David Aizman, Aleksandr Kipen and Semion Yushkevich to express in the language of art the incomprehensible.

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  • Authors: Michael L. Miller;

    by Yeshayahu A. Jelinek, New York, Carpatho‐Rusyn Research Center, distributed by Columbia University Press, 2007, xxi + 412 pp., US$60.00, ISBN 978‐0‐88033‐619‐2 At the beginning of Yale Strom’s 1...

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  • image/svg+xml art designer at PLoS, modified by Wikipedia users Nina, Beao, JakobVoss, and AnonMoos Open Access logo, converted into svg, designed by PLoS. This version with transparent background. http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Open_Access_logo_PLoS_white.svg art designer at PLoS, modified by Wikipedia users Nina, Beao, JakobVoss, and AnonMoos http://www.plos.org/
    Authors: Miklós Konrád;

    To what extent can one speak of “Jewish politics” in Hungary in the Dualist era? With emancipation in 1867, Hungarian Jewry officially ceased to exist as a legally and politically separate body. Naturally, at least one specific political interest still bound together Hungary's Jews; they all shared the common desire not to suffer on account of their being Jewish. Beyond that, however, Hungarian Jewry was not a politically undivided group. In terms of its relationship to Jewish tradition, levels of acculturation and socioeconomic status, the Jewish population, which had already been far from homogeneous before 1867, underwent a far‐reaching polarisation in subsequent decades. Furthermore, since Judaism was officially defined on a purely denominational basis, Jews were theoretically non‐existent on any level other than the strictly religious. Consequently, they could not fight for any specific political, social or economic interest. Nevertheless, from Orthodox Jewry to upper and middle‐class Jews, each grou...

    image/svg+xml art designer at PLoS, modified by Wikipedia users Nina, Beao, JakobVoss, and AnonMoos Open Access logo, converted into svg, designed by PLoS. This version with transparent background. http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Open_Access_logo_PLoS_white.svg art designer at PLoS, modified by Wikipedia users Nina, Beao, JakobVoss, and AnonMoos http://www.plos.org/ East European Jewish...arrow_drop_down
    image/svg+xml art designer at PLoS, modified by Wikipedia users Nina, Beao, JakobVoss, and AnonMoos Open Access logo, converted into svg, designed by PLoS. This version with transparent background. http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Open_Access_logo_PLoS_white.svg art designer at PLoS, modified by Wikipedia users Nina, Beao, JakobVoss, and AnonMoos http://www.plos.org/
    East European Jewish Affairs
    Article . 2009 . Peer-reviewed
    Data sources: Crossref
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      image/svg+xml art designer at PLoS, modified by Wikipedia users Nina, Beao, JakobVoss, and AnonMoos Open Access logo, converted into svg, designed by PLoS. This version with transparent background. http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Open_Access_logo_PLoS_white.svg art designer at PLoS, modified by Wikipedia users Nina, Beao, JakobVoss, and AnonMoos http://www.plos.org/ East European Jewish...arrow_drop_down
      image/svg+xml art designer at PLoS, modified by Wikipedia users Nina, Beao, JakobVoss, and AnonMoos Open Access logo, converted into svg, designed by PLoS. This version with transparent background. http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Open_Access_logo_PLoS_white.svg art designer at PLoS, modified by Wikipedia users Nina, Beao, JakobVoss, and AnonMoos http://www.plos.org/
      East European Jewish Affairs
      Article . 2009 . Peer-reviewed
      Data sources: Crossref
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  • Authors: Gabor Kadar; Zoltan Vagi;

    by Anna Porter, London, Constable, 2008, 560 pp., £9.99, ISBN 9781845297176 In the spring and summer of 1944, more than 150 trains carrying Jews left Nazi‐occupied Hungary. The overwhelming majorit...

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  • Authors: Zsuzsa Hetényi;

    Jews were strangers when they started to live within the borders of Tsarist Russia at the end of the eighteenth century, and they continued to be outsiders even when the integration, acculturation and assimilation process went on. The guest‐motif is an essential element of the home and exile dichotomy, often quoted in general terms, but rarely investigated closer in the texts. This motif may represent a special interest in Russian‐Jewish literature as one of the more emblematic topics of literature on assimilation that became a paradigm. The panoramic overview of the motif includes prose works by Iakov Rombro, Grigory Bogrov, Aleksandr Kipen, David Aizman, Andrei Sobol, Lev Lunts, Isaak Babel, Vladimir Jabotinsky and Friedrich Gorenshtein.

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  • Authors: András Kovács;

    L'article est consacre a l'antisemitisme en Hongrie et etudie plus specialement les formes de negation de l'Holocauste, la perception du role et de la responsabilite de la Hongrie durant la Seconde Guerre mondiale et l'attitude envers les Juifs actuellement.

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  • Authors: András Kovács;

    La situation des juifs de Hongrie est originale. Aujourd'hui, de 80.000 a 100.000 d'entre eux vivent sur le territoire hongrois et depuis l'Emancipation de 1867, le processus d'assimilation a ete continu. Cependant, la communaute juive hongroise est consideree comme un groupe social distinct par les non-juifs, mais egalement par les autres juifs. La perception contemporaine de ce phenomene a fait l'objet d'un sondage realise en 1992-93 aupres des etudiants, c'est a dire de l'elite intellectuelle de la prochaine generation

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  • addClaim

    This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.

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    0
    citations0
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  • Authors: János M. Bak;

    Based on personal memory and interviews with former classmates the author outlines the lives of 12 men from the professional middle class, who between 1939 and 1947 attended a segregated “Jewish class” of a renowned Budapest grammar school. The article follows their youth, education, survival of the Holocaust and their careers at home or abroad till the end of the twentieth century. Additionally, as far as it became known, one or two generations of ancestors, siblings, and spouses, and one or two generations of offspring are also presented. Finally, central issues of the lives of the “boys,” such as emigration, political conformism, and, above all, assimilation to the majority society will be discussed in separate chapters. These life and family histories may be regarded as typical of a not insignificant segment of Budapest Jewish society.

    addClaim

    This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.

    You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product.
    2
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  • Authors: Zsuzsa Hetényi;

    Despite the fact that the 1881/82 pogroms had a much greater effect on Jewish thinking, representing a watershed in the Jewish strategy of assimilation, the 1905 pogroms were much more widely mirrored in literature. The Silver Age period of Russian literature had a great impact on new stylistic strategies that were capable of depicting the horror and avoiding the sentimental, documentary or didactic extremities. The following article discusses what new ways were found by S. An‐sky, David Aizman, Aleksandr Kipen and Semion Yushkevich to express in the language of art the incomprehensible.

    addClaim

    This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.

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  • Authors: Michael L. Miller;

    by Yeshayahu A. Jelinek, New York, Carpatho‐Rusyn Research Center, distributed by Columbia University Press, 2007, xxi + 412 pp., US$60.00, ISBN 978‐0‐88033‐619‐2 At the beginning of Yale Strom’s 1...

    addClaim

    This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.

    You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product.
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  • image/svg+xml art designer at PLoS, modified by Wikipedia users Nina, Beao, JakobVoss, and AnonMoos Open Access logo, converted into svg, designed by PLoS. This version with transparent background. http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Open_Access_logo_PLoS_white.svg art designer at PLoS, modified by Wikipedia users Nina, Beao, JakobVoss, and AnonMoos http://www.plos.org/
    Authors: Miklós Konrád;

    To what extent can one speak of “Jewish politics” in Hungary in the Dualist era? With emancipation in 1867, Hungarian Jewry officially ceased to exist as a legally and politically separate body. Naturally, at least one specific political interest still bound together Hungary's Jews; they all shared the common desire not to suffer on account of their being Jewish. Beyond that, however, Hungarian Jewry was not a politically undivided group. In terms of its relationship to Jewish tradition, levels of acculturation and socioeconomic status, the Jewish population, which had already been far from homogeneous before 1867, underwent a far‐reaching polarisation in subsequent decades. Furthermore, since Judaism was officially defined on a purely denominational basis, Jews were theoretically non‐existent on any level other than the strictly religious. Consequently, they could not fight for any specific political, social or economic interest. Nevertheless, from Orthodox Jewry to upper and middle‐class Jews, each grou...

    image/svg+xml art designer at PLoS, modified by Wikipedia users Nina, Beao, JakobVoss, and AnonMoos Open Access logo, converted into svg, designed by PLoS. This version with transparent background. http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Open_Access_logo_PLoS_white.svg art designer at PLoS, modified by Wikipedia users Nina, Beao, JakobVoss, and AnonMoos http://www.plos.org/ East European Jewish...arrow_drop_down
    image/svg+xml art designer at PLoS, modified by Wikipedia users Nina, Beao, JakobVoss, and AnonMoos Open Access logo, converted into svg, designed by PLoS. This version with transparent background. http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Open_Access_logo_PLoS_white.svg art designer at PLoS, modified by Wikipedia users Nina, Beao, JakobVoss, and AnonMoos http://www.plos.org/
    East European Jewish Affairs
    Article . 2009 . Peer-reviewed
    Data sources: Crossref
    addClaim

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    6
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      image/svg+xml art designer at PLoS, modified by Wikipedia users Nina, Beao, JakobVoss, and AnonMoos Open Access logo, converted into svg, designed by PLoS. This version with transparent background. http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Open_Access_logo_PLoS_white.svg art designer at PLoS, modified by Wikipedia users Nina, Beao, JakobVoss, and AnonMoos http://www.plos.org/ East European Jewish...arrow_drop_down
      image/svg+xml art designer at PLoS, modified by Wikipedia users Nina, Beao, JakobVoss, and AnonMoos Open Access logo, converted into svg, designed by PLoS. This version with transparent background. http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Open_Access_logo_PLoS_white.svg art designer at PLoS, modified by Wikipedia users Nina, Beao, JakobVoss, and AnonMoos http://www.plos.org/
      East European Jewish Affairs
      Article . 2009 . Peer-reviewed
      Data sources: Crossref
      addClaim

      This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.

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  • Authors: Gabor Kadar; Zoltan Vagi;

    by Anna Porter, London, Constable, 2008, 560 pp., £9.99, ISBN 9781845297176 In the spring and summer of 1944, more than 150 trains carrying Jews left Nazi‐occupied Hungary. The overwhelming majorit...

    addClaim

    This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.

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  • Authors: Zsuzsa Hetényi;

    Jews were strangers when they started to live within the borders of Tsarist Russia at the end of the eighteenth century, and they continued to be outsiders even when the integration, acculturation and assimilation process went on. The guest‐motif is an essential element of the home and exile dichotomy, often quoted in general terms, but rarely investigated closer in the texts. This motif may represent a special interest in Russian‐Jewish literature as one of the more emblematic topics of literature on assimilation that became a paradigm. The panoramic overview of the motif includes prose works by Iakov Rombro, Grigory Bogrov, Aleksandr Kipen, David Aizman, Andrei Sobol, Lev Lunts, Isaak Babel, Vladimir Jabotinsky and Friedrich Gorenshtein.

    addClaim

    This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.

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  • Authors: András Kovács;

    L'article est consacre a l'antisemitisme en Hongrie et etudie plus specialement les formes de negation de l'Holocauste, la perception du role et de la responsabilite de la Hongrie durant la Seconde Guerre mondiale et l'attitude envers les Juifs actuellement.

    addClaim

    This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.

    You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product.
    0
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  • Authors: András Kovács;

    La situation des juifs de Hongrie est originale. Aujourd'hui, de 80.000 a 100.000 d'entre eux vivent sur le territoire hongrois et depuis l'Emancipation de 1867, le processus d'assimilation a ete continu. Cependant, la communaute juive hongroise est consideree comme un groupe social distinct par les non-juifs, mais egalement par les autres juifs. La perception contemporaine de ce phenomene a fait l'objet d'un sondage realise en 1992-93 aupres des etudiants, c'est a dire de l'elite intellectuelle de la prochaine generation

    addClaim

    This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.

    You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product.
    2
    citations2
    popularityAverage
    influenceTop 10%
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