Refugees and the “Other Hungary”: The Historiography of the Reception of Refugees in Twentieth-Century Hungary Cover Image

Refugees and the “Other Hungary”: The Historiography of the Reception of Refugees in Twentieth-Century Hungary
Refugees and the “Other Hungary”: The Historiography of the Reception of Refugees in Twentieth-Century Hungary

Author(s): Agnes Kelemen
Subject(s): Recent History (1900 till today), Government/Political systems, Political behavior, Politics and society, Studies in violence and power, Migration Studies, Inter-Ethnic Relations, Ethnic Minorities Studies, Peace and Conflict Studies, Asylum, Refugees, Migration as Policy-fields
Published by: Verlag Herder-Institut
Keywords: Hungary; refugees; historiography; twentieth century;

Summary/Abstract: This article surveys the historiography on refugees in twentieth-century Hungary (both works written by Hungarian and foreign researchers) to provide a critical overview of “refugeedom” in the Hungarian context. It identifies a need for future works on the topic to deal with conceptual history. The country’s twentieth-century history is divided into four parts for the purposes of studying the history of refugees: World War I and its aftermath until World War II; the escape from Nazism; the period of state socialism; and the period of transition to democracy. Within the Hungarian-language historiography, research on refugees has tended to support a positive national narrative in which Hungary has repeatedly functioned as a shelter for people who had to escape from somewhere due to real or feared persecution. As far as the two World Wars and the interwar period are concerned, historians pay attention to refugees and connect their reception to the grand questions of those periods (the origin of the interwar period’s antisemitism, Hungary’s relationship with the Third Reich). When it comes to the Cold War and the post-socialist era, however, research on refugee history is dominated by sociologists. This article argues that the refugee history of the Cold War period has remained marginal in historical works due to a widespread insistence on a link between migration and ethnicity that prevents researchers from giving as much attention to political refugees as to refugees who suffered persecution on account of their ethnicity or nationality.

  • Issue Year: 71/2022
  • Issue No: 4
  • Page Range: 491-514
  • Page Count: 24
  • Language: English