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Another Hungary - (Stanford Studies on Central and Eastern Europe) by Robert Nemes (Hardcover)

Another Hungary - (Stanford Studies on Central and Eastern Europe) by  Robert Nemes (Hardcover)
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Last Price: 70.00 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>A collective biography of eight individuals from the northeastern corner of prewar Hungary.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>A collective biography of eight individuals from the northeastern corner of prewar Hungary.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><i>Another Hungary</i> is a must read for anyone interested in the emergence of modernity beyond the well-known metropolitan contexts.--Bálint Varga "<i>Hungarian Historical Review</i>"<br><br><i>Another Hungary</i> is a brilliantly conceived and beautifully written collective portrait of eight men and women whose lives capture the complexities and contradictions of modern Hungary in the making. All of them had roots in small provincial towns but were eager to realize their dreams and ambitions on a wider stage. Telling their stories, Robert Nemes compels his readers to reconsider some of the great themes of modern East-Central European history--modernization, 'backwardness, ' nationalization, Christian-Jewish relations--from an unexpected perspective and finds insights that are surprising, original, provocative, and often poignant. There is simply no book quite like this.--Paul Hanebrink "Rutgers University"<br><br><i>Another Hungary</i> is a skillful expression of new cultural history. It boldly utilizes diverse sources to develop an alternative historical narrative, which provides profound insights into the social, religious and national transformations of the period.--Peter Thaler "<i>Slavic Review</i>"<br><br><i>Another Hungary</i> is a superbly crafted history that offers readers an absorbing account of rural small town Hungary in the nineteenth century. Robert Nemes displays a genius for elucidating the psychological dynamics of families, of gender relations, of neighborhoods, and of professional and personal rivalries. The book's genius lies in Nemes's skill at capturing the meanings of place in the lives of each of these very different women and men, while showing how they participated in the broad sweep of nineteenth-century social, political, and cultural developments that transformed European societies.--Pieter Judson "European University Institute"<br><br>[B]y breathing new life into them, Nemes has already succeeded in accomplishing the task that some of his subjects had set out to do: He acted as the intermediary between cultures and languages, and introduced these characters, along with a faraway corner of the former Austria-Hungary, to the English-speaking scholarly and general public.--Judith Szapor "<i>Austrian History Yearbook</i>"<br><br>[T]his is an intelligent, theoretically informed (but jargon-free) book that makes the most out of the biographical genre, offering, with its eight life stories, a varied read.--Ágoston Berecz "<i>East Central Europe</i>"<br><br>In addition to describing and illustrating the wider social and political phenomena of the nineteenth century, ... three of the perspectives of <i>Another Hungary</i> are noteworthy. The first is the already-mentioned importance ascribed to the notion of periphery; the second is related to the relevance of the methods employed; and the third involves the novelty and authenticity of the sources, as well as the prominence of the local ones contained in the study.--Raluca Goleteanu "<i>Acta Poloniae Historica</i>"<br><br>This is an original and illuminating contribution to the history of nineteenth-century Hungary, and in particular provincial Hungary. Through biographies of eight people, all from the northeastern corner of the kingdom, Robert Nemes casts light on the connection between the local and the national....The result is a brilliant series of snapshots of both the provinces and Hungarian society as a whole.--Ian D. Armour "<i>Canadian Journal of History</i>"<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Robert Nemes</b> is Associate Professor of History at Colgate University. He is the author of <i>The Once and Future Budapest</i> (2005).

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