Borders on the Move: Territorial Change and Forced Migration in the Hungarian-Slovak Borderlands, 1938-1948
In: Rochester Studies in East and Central Europe 25
8 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Rochester Studies in East and Central Europe 25
In: East central Europe: L' Europe du centre-est : eine wissenschaftliche Zeitschrift, Band 48, Heft 2-3, S. 361-364
ISSN: 1876-3308
This dissertation investigates the link between contested territories, border changes, and nationalizing practices in twentieth century East-Central Europe through the case study of southern Slovakia (Felvidék) as it shifted between Czechoslovak and Hungarian sovereignty from the years 1938 to 1945. The region, claimed by Czechoslovak, Slovak, and Hungarian nationalists, had belonged to Hungary prior to the First World War, was awarded to Czechoslovakia by the Treaty of Trianon in 1920, returned to Hungary by the First Vienna Arbitration in 1938, and restored to Czechoslovakia after World War II. This project integrates political and social history, focusing on both state and local actors in order to ascertain the everyday effects of nationalizing policy on the residents of Felvidék. Utilizing a variety of first-hand accounts from Hungary, Slovakia, and abroad, it chronicles the transfer of Felvidék to Hungary in November 1938 amid grandiose nationalist celebrations. Through Hungarian foreign ministry documents and local reports, it also examines the burgeoning propaganda rivalry between Hungarian and Slovak irredentists for physical and ideological control of the territory. Hungarian educational policy in the region is explored with the help of textbooks and yearbooks. Court cases and interior ministry documents speak to the issues of loyalty and suspicion that became central to Felvidék's return to Hungarian sovereignty. The dissertation probes the difficulties of reintegrating Felvidék back into the Hungarian state, focusing on questions of education, minority policy, and identity politics, revealing a multiplicity of complex national identities and loyalties in the region that confounded state officials.
BASE
In: Hungarian cultural studies: e-journal of the American Hungarian Educators Association, Band 5, S. 468-470
ISSN: 2471-965X
Reviewed by Leslie Waters
In: Hungarian cultural studies: e-journal of the American Hungarian Educators Association, Band 9, S. 323-324
ISSN: 2471-965X
Simon, Attila. 2013. The Hungarians of Slovakia in 1938. New York: Columbia University Press, East European Monographs. 353 pp.
In: East central Europe: L' Europe du centre-est : eine wissenschaftliche Zeitschrift, Band 43, Heft 1-2, S. 230-232
ISSN: 1876-3308
In: Contemporary European history, Band 24, Heft 3, S. 351-374
ISSN: 1469-2171
AbstractThis article discusses loyalty trials conducted in the Hungarian-Slovak borderland region known as Felvidék after it was reannexed to Hungary by the First Vienna Award in 1938. All civil servants who had worked for the Czechoslovak state had to appear before local loyalty commissions to prove their loyalty to the Hungarian state. The commissions' task was complicated by two competing conceptions of loyalty – one investigating civic loyalty, the other national loyalty – and the politicisation and ethnicisation of peoples' daily practices for the previous two decades under Czechoslovak rule.
In: East central Europe: L' Europe du centre-est : eine wissenschaftliche Zeitschrift, Band 39, Heft 2-3, S. 363-364
ISSN: 1876-3308