IMAGE VERSUS IDENTITY: ASSIMILATION AND DISCRIMINATION OF HUNGARY’S
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IMAGE VERSUS IDENTITY: ASSIMILATION AND DISCRIMINATION OF HUNGARY’S JEWRY
IMAGE VERSUS IDENTITY: ASSIMILATION AND DISCRIMINATION OF HUNGARY’S JEWRY

Author(s): Gábor Gyáni
Subject(s): Political history, Social history, Nationalism Studies, 19th Century, Pre-WW I & WW I (1900 -1919), WW II and following years (1940 - 1949), History of Antisemitism, Ethnic Minorities Studies
Published by: Akadémiai Kiadó
Keywords: of Jewish origin; acculturation; structural assimilation; postmodern notion of identity; co-constitutionality; cultural code; ethnic nationalism; political code;

Summary/Abstract: The contradictory process and the ambivalent result of Jewish assimilation in Hungary between 1867 and 1944 were shaped both by the Neolog-Orthodox duality and the fast acculturation of the Neolog Jewry. The image persistently attached to the Jew in Hungary, the basis of any sort of anti-Semitism, was the denominational bound Jewishness; the identity created and sustained mainly by the urban Neolog Jewish bourgeoisie was, however, definitely Magyar. When image and identity came to be confronted with each other, then political anti-Semitism could get a firm footing; this had happened from just around the late nineteenth and especially the beginning of the twentieth century. Still, there is more than simply a continuity between the form of anti-Semitism characterizing the age of Dualism and the one accompanying the interwar period, when it even became a state policy. The former was rooted in the mental construction of a cultural code, while the latter was most closely associated with the cognitive construction of political code. This also meant that while the former was exclusively carried by some social movements hostile to the issue of Jewish assimilation, the latter led to rigid state discrimination applied against all those the image of whom was identified with Jewishness.

  • Issue Year: 18/2004
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 153-162
  • Page Count: 10
  • Language: English