THE RECREATION OF THE NATION-ORIGINS OF THE HUNGARIAN POPULIST MOVEMENT (original) (raw)

AI-generated Abstract

The paper explores the origins of the Hungarian populist movement, tracing its roots to various youth organizations in the 1920s. It highlights the influence of groups like the Sarló movement, formed among the Hungarian minority in Czechoslovakia, on young intellectuals, particularly in shaping their national identity amidst cultural duality. It examines the socio-political context following the Treaty of Trianon, the challenges faced by the Hungarian minority, and how emerging educational initiatives contributed to a new concept of nationhood centered on societal reformation.

Sign up for access to the world's latest research.

checkGet notified about relevant papers

checkSave papers to use in your research

checkJoin the discussion with peers

checkTrack your impact

The Impact of Trianon: Intellectual and Activist Movements of Hungarian Youth in the Detached Territories, 1920-1933

E Hungarian Studies Review;Spring-Fall2012, Vol. 39 Issue 1/2, p75

ABSTRACT The article discusses the impact of the Treaty of Trianon on intellectual and activist youth movements in territories cut off from the Hungarian kingdom as a result of the treaty, focusing on the activities and aims of two minority Hungarian youth groups from 1920 to 1933: Czechoslovakia's St. George Scout Circle, eventually called Sarl� (sickle), and Romania's Transylvanian Youth (Erd�lyi Fiatalok). The author discusses the groups as a means for members to maintain a Hungarian identity and develop leadership of the Hungarian minority. The political and cultural effects of the division of Hungary on Slovakia and Transylvania are discussed, and the formation and eventual decline of both youth movements is described.

National Interactions: Hungarians as Minorities and Changes in the Definition of Who Is Hungarian in the 1930s

Influences, Pressures Pro and Con, and Opportunities. Studies on Political Interactions in and Involving Hungary in the Twentieth Century, 2014

Offi ce, felt that using the name of a prime minister would call too much attention to it on the part of Romania's intelligence and counter-intelligence services. Th is they would have preferred to avoid, since the Hostel/College, which in part did operate as a place where students lived, but did not really off er accommodations to foreigners in general, only to ethnic Hungarians coming from Romania.

The Picture of the Czechs through the Eyes of Hungarian Politicians

Az első világháború irodalmi és történelmi aspektusai a kelet-európai régióban - Tanulmánykötet, Trefort-Kert Alapítvány - ELTE Doktorandusz Önkormányzat, Budapest, 2017

The concepts and thoughts about the Czechs of the Horthy era are not particularly researched in Hungary. However, a lot of publications about the revisionist movement and about the politics of the neighbour states circulated during the interwar period. is paper intends to give a short insight into the way how the Hungarian politicians from the lee wing progressives to the far right radicals thoughts about the Czechs who were mostly judged negatively because of the politics of Prague and Edvard Beneš, but how some of them also imagined that the cooperation between the Czechs and Hungary is possible under certain circumstances.

Loading...

Loading Preview

Sorry, preview is currently unavailable. You can download the paper by clicking the button above.