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Kósa, Judit N.
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W przeglądzie prasy europejskiej euro|topics cytowano dotąd 3 artykuły/artykułów tego autora.
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Népszabadság - Węgry | 06/04/2007
Hungarian culture and political partisanship
According to a new survey, the majority of Hungarian respondents regard Hungarian culture only partially as part of Europe's cultural heritage. Judit N. Kósa comments: "Could this shocking result not be because we ourselves are unsure of what we understand by Hungarian culture? Since the fall of communism politicians have been fighting a bitter battle of cultures, politics is omnipresent in all areas of cultural education and Hungarian culture is being segregated. People choose books, films and music according to which political party an artist belongs to. As in the times of the dictatorship, theatre directors are chosen according to their party allegiance; plays are criticized for political reasons; we look for the political message first in sculptures, instead of just letting them work on us visually."
» Artykuł (Link zewnętrzny, węgierski)
Więcej z przeglądu prasy na temat » Styl życia, » Węgry
Niestety tłumaczenie tego tekstu na język polski nie jest jeszcze dostępne, dlatego możemy udostępnić Ci wyłącznie wersję w języku: angielski.
Népszabadság - Węgry | 14/12/2006
Hungary's idealised past
Judit Kósa sharply criticises recent attempts to idealise Hungary's past. She is prompted to this by Gabor Koltay's documentary film about Miklós Horthy, the authoritarian regent who was head of the Hungarian state between 1920 and 1944, and György Moldova's monography about János Kádár, leader of the Hungarian Communist Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party between 1956 and 1988: "Both oversimplify the most important periods of the 20th century and its complex political systems, as if they were talking to little children. Their portrayals of Kádár and Horthy are rendered with complete disregard for the results of historical research. In two thick volumes Kádár is portrayed as the righteous leader of his people, a puritan petit bourgeois and a victim of history. The film about Horthy is over-long and portrays him as the saviour of the Hungarian nation, a wonderful father and the last hope for Hungarian Jews threatened by the Holocaust. Both portrayals are despairingly false."
» Artykuł (Link zewnętrzny, węgierski)
Więcej z przeglądu prasy na temat » Historia, » Węgry
Niestety tłumaczenie tego tekstu na język polski nie jest jeszcze dostępne, dlatego możemy udostępnić Ci wyłącznie wersję w języku: angielski.
Népszabadság - Węgry | 09/08/2006
Budapest's Moscow Square
The Association of Young Christian Democrats (IKSZ) wants Moscow Square, one of Budapest's most important traffic junctions, to be renamed "Square of the Revolution of 1956". It argues that Budapest has not a single important location commemorating the resistance to Soviet occupation. Judit N. Kosa regards the initiative as absurd. She argues that Moscow is simply a city within Europe and that the name has no political connotations. She accuses the young Christian Democrats of making a fuss about unimportant issues while Budapest has real problems to deal with. "Of course, 1956 should be commemorated in an appropriate manner, even if the shadows of the monuments and counter-monuments prevent a clear view of the events of that time. To change the name of Moscow Square wouldn't be doing justice to the spirit of 1956. It will be a great and moving day when we finally manage to make an objective analysis of the events of 50 years ago."
» Artykuł (Link zewnętrzny, węgierski)
Więcej z przeglądu prasy na temat » Polityka wewnętrzna, » Historia, » Węgry