Kurzus nemzetközi vendég- és részidős hallgatóknak

Kar
Bölcsészettudományi Kar
Szervezet
BTK Néprajzi Intézet
Kód
BA-ERA-IE-S-02
Cím
Hungarian Culture, Hungarian Politics of culture
Tervezett félév
Őszi
ECTS
6
Nyelv
en
Oktatás célja
Hungarian culture Hungarian politics of culture This interactive course will analyse the main paradigm chances, trends and products  of Hungarian popular culture and public discourse Hungarian culture Analysing the main paradigm changes after the fall of communism. The course will take a closer look at concepts like folklore in academic thinking folklore in education, cultural institutes, bottom up movements. We will analyse the changing notion of Hungarian cultural heritage. The course will offer an insight into the changing and diverse  concepts of nationalism, nation, national culture, ethnicity, language territory. We will apply a comparative perspective focusing on UNESCO Cultural Heritage policies and Hungarian National Heritage concepts The course requires fallowing two currently active think tanks, two blogs and reading regularly up to date contemporary publications of AHEA from 2019-2023 Grading: - active participation inclass discussions based on weekly reading assignments sent by email. 2p. - oral exam at the end of the semester based on the lectures, readings and individual contribution.  Readings Arens, Katherine. 2001 ”Politics, History, and Public Intellectuals in Central Europe after 1989." Comparative Central European Culture. Ed. Steven Tötösy de Zepetnek. West Lafayette: Purdue UP, 115-32. Balázs, Géza 2004 ”On Hungarian Pessimism." Times, Places, Passages: Ethnological Approaches to the New Millennium. Ed. Attila Paládi-Kovács, Györgyi Csukás, Réka Kiss, Ildikó Kristóf, Ilona Nagy, and Zsuzsa Szarvas. Budapest: Akadémiai. 499-506. Balassa, Iván – Ortutay, Gyula 1984 Hungarian Ethnography and Folklore. Budapest. Balogh, Balázs, and Á. Fulemile 2008 “Cultural Alternatives, Youth and Grassroots Resistance in Socialist Hungary: The Folkdance and Music Revival." Hungarian Studies 22.1-2: 43-62.  Bárány, Zoltán 2002 The East European Gypsies: Regime Change, Marginality, and Ethnopolitics. Cambridge: Cambridge UP. Bozóki András 2018 ”Hungary’s crisis of democracy. The road to serfdom." Journal of Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe, 26(2-3), pp. 310–311   Farkas, Enikő 2004 "Political Resistance in Hungarian Dress." Voices: The Journal of New York Folklore 30.1-2, p. 42-45. Csonka-Takács Eszter 2016 Intangible cultural heritage communities in the network of the Skanzen Hungarian Open Air Museum. Acta Ethnographica Hungarica, 61 (2). pp. 431-439. Gerner, Kristian 2007 "Open Wounds? Trianon, the Holocaust and the Hungarian Trauma." Collective Traumas: Memories of War and Conflict in 20th-century Europe. Ed. Conny Mithander, John Sundholm, Maria Holmgren Troy, and Bo Stråth. Brussels: PU Européennes. 79-109.  Gerő, András 2006 Imagined History: Chapters from Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Hungarian Symbolic Politics. Michigan: U of Michigan P.   Gyányi, Gábor 2004 Identity and the Urban Experience: Fin-de-siècle Budapest. Trans. Thomas J. DeKornfeld. Wayne: Center for Holocaust Studies and Publications. Gábor Klaniczay—Éva Pócs ed. 2017 Witchcraft and Demonology in Hungary and Transylvania. Palgrave Historical Studies in Witchcraft and Magic (PHSWM).  A paper by choice https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-319-54756-5  Tötösy de Zepetnek, Steven 2011 "The Anti-Other in Post-1989 Austria and Hungary." Comparative Hungarian Cultural Studies. Ed. Steven Tötösy de Zepetnek and Louise O. Vasvári. West Lafayette: Purdue UP. 332-43.

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