Cover of Another Hungary by Robert Nemes
Another Hungary
The Nineteenth-Century Provinces in Eight Lives
Robert Nemes

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Available in May
312 pp.
$65.00

Cloth ISBN: 9780804795913

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Another Hungary tells the stories of eight remarkable individuals: an aristocrat, merchant, engineer, teacher, journalist, rabbi, tobacconist, and writer. All eight came from the same woebegone corner of prewar Hungary. Their biographies illuminate how the region's residents made sense of economic underdevelopment, ethnic diversity, and relations between Christians and Jews. Taken together, their stories create a unique picture of the troubled history of Eastern Europe, viewed not from the capital cities, but from the small towns and villages.

Through these eight lives, Another Hungary investigates the wider processes that remade Eastern Europe in the nineteenth century. It asks: How did people make sense of the dramatic changes, from the advent of the railroad to the outbreak of the First World War? How did they respond to the army of political ideologies that marched through this region: liberalism, socialism, nationalism, antisemitism, and Zionism? To what extent did people in the provinces not just react to, but influence what was happening in the centers of political power? This collective biography confirms that nineteenth-century Hungary was no earthly paradise. But it also shows that the provinces produced men and women with bold ideas on how to change their world.

About the author

Robert Nemes is Associate Professor of History at Colgate University. He is the author of The Once and Future Budapest (2005).

"Another Hungary is a brilliantly conceived and beautifully written collective portrait of eight men and women whose lives capture the complexities and contradictions of modern Hungary in the making. All of them had roots in small provincial towns but were eager to realize their dreams and ambitions on a wider stage. Telling their stories, Robert Nemes compels his readers to reconsider some of the great themes of modern East-Central European history—modernization, 'backwardness,' nationalization, Christian-Jewish relations—from an unexpected perspective and finds insights that are surprising, original, provocative, and often poignant. There is simply no book quite like this."

—Paul Hanebrink, Rutgers University