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Found 24 items.
  • Csapody, Tamás. Bori Munkaszolgálatosok: Fejezetek a Bori Munkaszolgálat Történetéből. [The Forced Laborers of Bor: Chapters from the History of the Forced Laborers of Bor]

    Julia Bock
    483-486
    2012-01-01
  • The Poetry of 1.5 and Second-Generation Israelis of Hungarian Origin

    Ilana Rosen
    46-62
    2016-01-22
  • Schult, Tanja, A Hero’s Many Faces: Raoul Wallenberg in Contemporary Monuments

    Ruth G. Biro
    476-482
    2012-01-01
  • Hungarian Women’s Holocaust Life Writing in the Context of the Nation’s Divided Social Memory, 1944-2014

    Louise O. Vasvári
    54-81
    2015-01-09
  • Mapping the Intergenerational Memory of the Holocaust in Hungarian Bystander Families: The Case of Sacha Batthyány’s Identity Novel, Und was hat das mit mir zu tun? [‘And What Does That Have to Do With Me?’]

    Gergely Kunt
    54-67
    2017-09-06
  • Review Article: Inventing Historical Myths—Deborah S. Cornelius. Hungary in World War II. Caught in the Cauldron.

    Peter Pastor
    311-340
    2012-01-01
  • Rereading the Transmutations of Miksa Fenyő’s 1944-1945 Diary, Az elsodort ország [‘A Nation Adrift’]

    Maya J. Lo Bello
    176-185
    2021-07-16
  • Fragments of a Hungarian Past in the Literature of 1.5 and Second-Generation Austro-Hungarian Immigrants in Israel

    Ilana Rosen
    41-53
    2015-01-09
  • The Yellow Star and Everyday Life under Exceptional Circumstances: Diaries of 1944-1945 Budapest

    Louise O. Vasvári
    43-59
    2016-10-11
  • Danilo Kiš and the Hungarian Holocaust: The Early Novel Psalm 44

    John K. Cox
    167-184
    2012-01-01
  • Hungarian Cookbooks for Israeli Readers: A Comparative Literary-Cultural Analysis

    Ilana Rosen
    131-141
    2020-07-30
  • Ironic Narrative Agency as a Method of Coping with Trauma in the Diary-Memoir of Margit K., a Female Holocaust Survivor

    Gergely Kunt
    28-40
    2015-01-09
  • Review Article: "A Hungarian Refugee in England and Holland." Pogany, George. 2012. When Even the Poets Were Silent: The Life of a Jewish Hungarian Holocaust Survivor under Nazism and Communism. Afterword by Istvan Pogany. Kenilworth, UK: Brandram, Imprint of Takaway Publishing. 263 pp.; Pogany, George. 2014. Where Is My Home? A Hungarian Refugee in England and Holland. Lexington KY: CreateSpace. 209 pp. Illus.

    Ruth G. Biro
    220-230
    2016-10-11
  • Constructing Narrative Identities in the Holocaust Memories/Memoirs of Three Women

    Louise O. Vasvári
    75-97
    2020-07-30
  • Review Article: The Saddest History Ever Written: On Randolph L. Braham’s "The Geographical Encyclopedia of the Holocaust in Hungary" (2013)

    Marguerite De Huszar Allen
    1-10
    2015-01-09
  • The Holocaust Journal of Miksa Fenyő

    Maya J. Lo Bello
    60-71
    2016-10-11
  • The Controversy About 1944 in Hungary and the Escape of Budapest’s Jews from Deportation. A Response.

    Géza Jeszenszky
    67-74
    2020-07-30
  • Bohus, Kata, Peter Hallama and Stephan Stach, eds. 2022. Growing in the Shadow of Antifascism: Remembering the Holocaust in State-Socialist Eastern Europe. Budapest: Central European University Press. 340 pp. Illus.

    Zoltán Kékesi
    179-181
    2023-09-06
  • A New Historical Myth from Hungary: The Legend of Colonel Ferenc Koszorús as the Wartime Savior of the Jews of Budapest. Review Article of Jeszenszky, Géza, ed. July 1944: Deportation of the Jews of Budapest Foiled. Reno, Nevada: Helena History Press, 2018, pp. 317. Distributed by CEU Press.

    Peter Pastor
    132-149
    2019-08-01
  • The Auschwitz Report The Impact of Its Revelations in Switzerland and Hungary

    Frank Baron
    73-91
    2023-09-06
  • Review Article: Souls, Hearts and Heritage: Passing from the Danube to the Hudson. Szegedy-Maszák, Marianne. 2013. I Kiss Your Hands Many Times – Hearts, Souls and Wars in Hungary. New York: Spiegel & Grau, Random House. 345 pp; and Griesz, Katherine. 2012. From the Danube to the Hudson. Seattle, WA: CreateSpace Independent Publishing. 482 pp.

    Evi Blaikie
    21-27
    2015-01-09
  • The Abject as Body Language in Imre Kertész’s Fateless and Alaine Polcz’s One Woman in the War

    Edit Zsadányi
    92-107
    2019-08-01
  • Tripping over the Dead: Hungarian-Israeli Holocaust Survivor Women's Narratives of Immigration, Restoration, and Remembrance

    Ilana Rosen
    348-361
    2012-01-01
  • A Hungarian Musician’s Memoir of Suffering, Survival, and Fate Így végződött

    Jeffrey Charles Wagner
    224-241
    2023-09-06
1 - 24 of 24 items
Keywords

ISSN 2471-965X (online)


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