lntellectual and Social Developments in the Habsburg Empire from Maria Theresa to World War I. Essays dedicated to Robert A. Kann, edited by Stanley B. Winters and Joseph Held, in Collaboration with István Deák and Adam Wandruszka. In East European Monographs, No. 11. Boulder, Colo.: East European Quarterly, 1975. Pp. 304. $14.00.

1981 ◽  
Vol 17 ◽  
pp. 398-401
Author(s):  
Wolfgang Häusler
1996 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 371-376
Author(s):  
Andrew Ludanyi

The fate of Hungarian minorities in East Central Europe has been one of the most neglected subjects in the Western scholarly world. For the past fifty years the subject—at least prior to the late 1980s—was taboo in the successor states (except Yugoslavia), while in Hungary itself relatively few scholars dared to publish anything about this issue till the early 1980s. In the West, it was just not faddish, since most East European and Russian Area studies centers at American, French and English universities tended to think of the territorial status quo as “politically correct.” The Hungarian minorities, on the other hand, were a frustrating reminder that indeed the Entente after World War I, and the Allies after World War II, made major mistakes and significantly contributed to the pain and anguish of the peoples living in this region of the “shatter zone.”


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