Szanto Ildiko - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

Szanto Ildiko

Related Authors

Richard Esbenshade

Dániel Veress

Erika Szívós

Gábor Koloh

Gábor Koloh

Institute of History of Hungarian Academy of Sciences

Dora Frey

Bálint Lakatos

Clara Royer

Clara Royer

CEFRES, Centre français de recherche en sciences sociales

Ákos Bartha

Ildikó  Bajcsi

Uploads

Papers by Szanto Ildiko

Research paper thumbnail of Hungarian Population Discourses in the Twentieth Century: The Problem of Declining Birth Rates

Hungarian Cultural Studies, 2016

Falling birth rates had already been recorded as early as the late-eighteenth century in south-we... more Falling birth rates had already been recorded as early as the late-eighteenth century in south-western Hungary in the Ormánság. Population loss from low birth rate remained one of the main topics writers and sociologists focused on in the twentieth century. The issue of Hungarian population decline was highlighted among the social ills in the interwar period, which was one of several subjects that divided intellectuals into ‘populists’ and ‘urbanites’. Following the impact of the low birth rate figures in the 1960s, the populists’ views of the 1930s resurfaced in public discourse in the 1960s and 1970s and up to the present day. The concern about the increasing trend of single-child families in rural settlements as well as in urban areas appeared in the various works of Hungarian writers and journalists throughout the previous century. The present paper intends to focus on the intellectual background to the public debates on the population issue, outlining the accounts of the interw...

Research paper thumbnail of Hungarian Population Discourses in the Twentieth Century: The Problem of Declining Birth Rates

Falling birth rates had already been recorded as early as the late-eighteenth century in southwes... more Falling birth rates had already been recorded as early as the late-eighteenth century in southwestern Hungary in the Ormánság. Population loss from low birth rate remained one of the main topics writers and sociologists focused on in the twentieth century. The issue of Hungarian population decline was highlighted among the social ills in the interwar period, which was one of several subjects that divided intellectuals into " populists " and " urbanites. " Following the impact of the low birth rate figures in the 1960s, the populists' views of the 1930s resurfaced in public discourse in the 1960s and 1970s and up to the present day. The concern about the increasing trend of single-child families in rural settlements as well as in urban areas appeared in the various works of Hungarian writers and journalists throughout the previous century. The present paper intends to focus on the intellectual background to the public debates on the population issue, outlining the accounts of the interwar " village explorers " briefly, and the way they are related to the pre-Second World War populist movement. Finally the reappearance of the debates between populists and non-populists of the 1970s is discussed, a debate that is still continuing.

Research paper thumbnail of Hungarian Population Discourses in the Twentieth Century: The Problem of Declining Birth Rates

Hungarian Cultural Studies, 2016

Falling birth rates had already been recorded as early as the late-eighteenth century in south-we... more Falling birth rates had already been recorded as early as the late-eighteenth century in south-western Hungary in the Ormánság. Population loss from low birth rate remained one of the main topics writers and sociologists focused on in the twentieth century. The issue of Hungarian population decline was highlighted among the social ills in the interwar period, which was one of several subjects that divided intellectuals into ‘populists’ and ‘urbanites’. Following the impact of the low birth rate figures in the 1960s, the populists’ views of the 1930s resurfaced in public discourse in the 1960s and 1970s and up to the present day. The concern about the increasing trend of single-child families in rural settlements as well as in urban areas appeared in the various works of Hungarian writers and journalists throughout the previous century. The present paper intends to focus on the intellectual background to the public debates on the population issue, outlining the accounts of the interw...

Research paper thumbnail of Hungarian Population Discourses in the Twentieth Century: The Problem of Declining Birth Rates

Falling birth rates had already been recorded as early as the late-eighteenth century in southwes... more Falling birth rates had already been recorded as early as the late-eighteenth century in southwestern Hungary in the Ormánság. Population loss from low birth rate remained one of the main topics writers and sociologists focused on in the twentieth century. The issue of Hungarian population decline was highlighted among the social ills in the interwar period, which was one of several subjects that divided intellectuals into " populists " and " urbanites. " Following the impact of the low birth rate figures in the 1960s, the populists' views of the 1930s resurfaced in public discourse in the 1960s and 1970s and up to the present day. The concern about the increasing trend of single-child families in rural settlements as well as in urban areas appeared in the various works of Hungarian writers and journalists throughout the previous century. The present paper intends to focus on the intellectual background to the public debates on the population issue, outlining the accounts of the interwar " village explorers " briefly, and the way they are related to the pre-Second World War populist movement. Finally the reappearance of the debates between populists and non-populists of the 1970s is discussed, a debate that is still continuing.

Log In