The Historical Construction of National Consciousness

Jeno SzucsGábor Klaniczay, Balázs Trencsényi, Gábor Gyáni (eds)
Title
The Historical Construction of National Consciousness
Subtitle
Selected Writings
ISBN
9789633864753
Format
eBook PDF (Adobe DRM)
Number of pages
360
Language
English
Publication date
Categories
Imprint
Also available as
Hardback - € 146,00
Table of Contents
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Introduction: Reading and Rereading Jenő Szűcs

“Nationality” and “National Consciousness” in the Middle Ages: Towards the Development of a Common Conceptual Language

“Gentilism”: The Question of Barbarian Ethnic Consciousness

Theoretical Elements in Master Simon of Kéza’s Gesta Hungarorum (1282–1285)

Nation and People in the Late Middle Ages

The Ideology of György Dózsa’s Peasant War

The Three Historical Regions of Europe

Questions of “Origins” and National Consciousness

A Bibliography of Published Works by Jenő Szűcs
Index

Jeno Szucs

The Historical Construction of National Consciousness

Selected Writings

A long essay entitled Three Historical Regions of Europe, appearing first in a samizdat volume in Budapest in 1980, instantly put its author into the forefront of the transnational debate on Central Europe, alongside such intellectual luminaries as Milan Kundera and Czesław Miłosz. The present volume offers English-language readers a rich selection of the depth and breadth of the legacy of Jenő Szűcs (1928–1988).

The selection documents Szűcs’s seminal contribution to many contemporary debates in historical anthropology, nationalism studies, and conceptual history. It contains his key texts on the history of national consciousness and patterns of collective identity, as well as medieval and early modern political thought. The works published here, most of them previously unavailable in English, provide a sophisticated analysis of a wide range of subjects from the myths of origins of Hungarians before Christianization to the political and religious ideology of the Dózsa peasant uprising in 1514, the medieval roots of civil society, or the revival of ethnic nationalism during the communist era. The volume, with an introduction by the editors locating Szűcs in a transnational context, offers a unique insight into the complex and sensitive debate on national identity in post-1945 East Central Europe.

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Author

Jeno Szucs

Jeno Szucs (1928-1988) was a Hungarian historian.

Editors

Gábor Klaniczay

Gábor Klaniczay is University Professor of Medieval Studies at the Central European University.

Balázs Trencsényi

Balázs Trencsényi is a Professor at the History Department of Central European University.


Gábor Gyáni

Gábor Gyáni is Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of History of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.