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Hungary After 1989: Inscribing a New Past on Place
Foote, Kenneth E. ; Tóth, Attila ; Árvay, Anett
Geographical review, 2000-07, Vol.90 (3), p.301-334
[Periódico revisado por pares]
Oxford, UK: Taylor & Francis
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Título:
Hungary After 1989: Inscribing a New Past on Place
Autor:
Foote, Kenneth E.
;
Tóth, Attila
;
Árvay, Anett
Assuntos:
Bgi / Prodig
;
Cemeteries
;
Commemorations
;
Communism
;
contested places
;
Culture
;
Eastern Europe
;
Europe
;
Government and politics
;
Graves
;
Heroes
;
Historic monuments
;
Holocaust
;
Human geography
;
Hungary
;
Local government
;
Magyars
;
Memorials
;
Memorials & monuments
;
Monuments
;
National characteristics, Hungarian
;
National identity
;
Political aspects
;
Political geography
;
Political opposition
;
Post-communism
;
Post-communist societies
;
Public history
;
Religious symbolism
;
Renovation & restoration
;
Shrines
;
Signs and symbols
;
Statues
;
War memorials
;
World wars
É parte de:
Geographical review, 2000-07, Vol.90 (3), p.301-334
Notas:
The authors wish to thank: éva Tarjányi; Huba Brückner and the staff of the Hungarian-American Commission for Educational Exchange; Gábor Mezösi and the faculty, staff, and students of the Department of Physical Geography at the University of Szeged, including in particular Timea Kiss, László Mucsi, and János Rakonszai; László Regéczy-Nagy, Noel Harrison, Sanford Levinson, Edward Linenthal, Patrick McGreevy, Michael Steiner, Robert Stevenson, Mrs. József Lovászi, Géza Boros, Tibor Wehner, László Erdös, Péter Pál Kocsis, and the University Research Institute of the University of Texas at Austin.
ark:/67375/WNG-W5DWVRLT-T
ArticleID:GERE340
istex:F74DBE784EAD3FEA4F9A1E9A04DC0438C5B9AC40
Dr. Tóth is with the Office of the Csongrád County General Assembly, 6720 Szeged, Hungary.
Ms. árvay is a lecturer in Hungarian Studies at the University of Szeged, 6722 Szeged, Hungary, and a doctoral student in linguistics at Loránd Eötvös University, 1364 Budapest, Hungary.
Dr. Foote is a professor of geography at the University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309.
The authors wish to thank: éva Tarjányi; Huba Brückner and the staff of the Hungarian‐American Commission for Educational Exchange; Gábor Mezösi and the faculty, staff, and students of the Department of Physical Geography at the University of Szeged, including in particular Timea Kiss, László Mucsi, and János Rakonszai; László Regéczy‐Nagy, Noel Harrison, Sanford Levinson, Edward Linenthal, Patrick McGreevy, Michael Steiner, Robert Stevenson, Mrs. József Lovászi, Géza Boros, Tibor Wehner, László Erdös, Péter Pál Kocsis, and the University Research Institute of the University of Texas at Austin.
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ObjectType-Feature-1
content type line 23
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Descrição:
Since the fall of the Communist government in 1989, Hungary's political monuments and historical shrines have undergone great change. Although popular attention focused on the removal of overtly political monuments, new shrines were also created, and forgotten memorials were restored. In a departure from earlier political eras, decisions about contested places are issuing from local authorities and private citizens, rather than from the central government. The result is a sometimes subtle rearrangement of public memorials and shrines that interprets the national past by drawing symbolic and spatial parallels between some historical events while rejecting connections among others. The meanings of events and places, particularly those linked to twentieth-century wartime and civil upheavals, remain contested.
Editor:
Oxford, UK: Taylor & Francis
Idioma:
Inglês
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