Worlds of Hungarian Writing

Worlds of Hungarian Writing
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National Literature as Intercultural Exchange
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Artikel-Nr:
9781611478419
Veröffentl:
2016
Seiten:
340
Autor:
András Kiséry
eBook Typ:
EPUB
Kopierschutz:
Adobe DRM [Hard-DRM]
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

This book discusses modern Hungarian literary culture as a site of intercultural exchange, suggesting through a variety of case-studies that encounters with foreign literatures are integral to national literary tradition, and studying them renews critical perspectives on national literary history. It contributes to current reconsiderations of methods of literary historiography, and will appeal to readers interested in Hungarian literature, and to scholars of reception study, cultural memory, comparative literary study, and of world literature.
Worlds of Hungarian Writing responds to the rapidly growing interest in Hungarian authors throughout the English-speaking world. Addressing an international audience, the essays in the collection highlight the intercultural contexts that have molded the conventions, genres and institutions of Hungarian writing from the nineteenth century to the present. They are mapping some of the ways in which a modern literature is produced by encounters with languages, cultures, and media external to its traditionally conceived boundaries. But rather than viewing intercultural exchange as an external force, the collection recognizes its enabling importance to the globalizing reception and circulation of Hungarian writing over the continuities and constraints implied by more traditional national narratives. Worlds of Hungarian Writing posits intercultural exchange as the very substance of a literary culture.Discussions of the politics of appropriation and translation, of the impact of émigré writers and critics, and of the use of world-literary models in genre-formation complement studies of the fate of western leftist critical theory in post-1989 Hungary, of the role of African-American models in contemporary Roma culture, and of the use of photography in late 20th-century prose. The volume spans a wide generic range, from the achievements of such canonical 19th-century critics and poets as József Bajza and János Arany, to neglected women authors-translators such as Theresa Pulszky, to modernist writers and critics like Antal Szerb and György Lukács, and to the contemporary novelists Péter Esterházy, Péter Nádas, and László Krasznahorkai. Each essay is an original contribution to comparative literature and to the study of this Central-European literature, but is intended to be accessible to readers unfamiliar with its traditions.
Acknowledgments
Note on Translations
Note on Contributors
Introduction: World Literature in Hungarian Literary Culture by András Kiséry and Zsolt Komáromy:
Chapter 1: Wordsworth in Hungary”: An Essay on Reception as Cultural Memory and
Forgetting by Zsolt Komáromy
Chapter 2: Negotiating the Popular/National Voice: Impropriety in Two Hungarian
Translations of Robert Burns by Veronika Ruttkay
Chapter 3: Translation, Modernization and the Female Pen: Hungarian Women as
Literary Mediators in the Nineteenth Century by Zsuzsanna Varga
Chapter 4: The Hungarian Verse Novel in a Cross-Cultural Perspective by Júlia Bácskai
Atkári
Chapter 5: Antal Szerb’s The Queen’s Necklace: A ‘true story’ of Cross-cultural Intersections in Hungarian Literature by Ágnes Vashegyi MacDonald
Chapter 6: Mediation and Hybridity: Twentieth-Century Hungarian Émigré Literary Scholars by Sándor Hites
Chapter 7: The New Left’s Use and Abuse of György Lukács’s Thought by György Túry
Chapter 8: Recontextualization, Localization, Hybridization: Intercultural Matrices in
Hungarian Roma and African American Life Writings by Tamás Demény
Chapter 9: The Cultural (Un)Turn in Hungarian Literary Scholarship in the 1990s:
Strategies of Inclusion and Exclusion by Györgyi Horváth
Chapter 10: Borderline Fiction: Eastern Europe and East–West Encounters in László
Krasznahorkai’s Works by Edit Zsadányi
Chapter 11: Text, Image, Memory: Intermediality in the Work of Péter Nádas
by Lauren Walsh
Chapter 12: Monuments and Bulldozers: Social Memory Landscapes in Péter Esterházy’s
Celestial Harmonies and Donald Barthelme’s The Dead Fatherby Katalin Orbán
Index
About the Editors and Contributors

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