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“The process through which we assimilate our past contributes to and shapes our identity: it is a burdensome heritage that determines, sets tasks and sets a direction, but it is also a treasure we can be proud of.” – said András Gér at the opening of the Tradition, Identity and History (HIT2018) conference held on 25–26 October 2018. According to the coverage of the www.reformatus.hu portal, the synod advisor of the Reformed Church in Hungary (MRE) also emphasized that: “We must face what is behind us and understand why we have become what we are! As a result, we proudly but humbly assume our identity among our fellow human beings.”
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Most of the readers of this journal are used to finding positive reviews in this section written with the purpose of recommending a worthy piece of academic literature to our peers. With the intention of breaking this pattern, allow me to provide the possible readers with a set of warnings with regard to whom I do not recommend this book to. So, if you do not find yourself in any of the predicaments below, do consider picking up a copy of the book as it will not disappoint you.
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Olga Lukács is a professor at Babeș–Bolyai University in Kolozsvár/Cluj-Napoca, a dedicated and renowned Transylvanian historian who was a research fellow in the international Healing of Memories (HoM) project for seven years. Many of her publications and studies can be read in prominent national and international journals. The book titled Az erdélyi egyházak ezeréves együttélésének szinopszisa is the shortened form of the author’s doctoral thesis published by Károli Gáspár Reformed Unversity and L’Harmattan Publishing House in Budapest in 2020.
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The volume A Tribute to György Ligeti in His Native Transylvania (nos. 1-2) is quite an event in Romanian musicology. Edited by distinguished musicologists Bianca Țiplea Temeș and Kofi Agawu, the volume enjoys the contribution of fifteen researchers from various cultures, schools, and generations – in keeping with multicultural Transylvania, Ligeti’s place of origin. The idea to pay him homage in Cluj-Napoca, the very city the composer studied in between 1941-43, was Bianca Țiplea Temeș’, the musicologist and professor at the “Gheorghe Dima” National Academy of Music, founder and director of the festival “A Tribute to György Ligeti in His Native Transylvania” whose first edition in 2006 marked the composer’s 10th death anniversary.
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Tim Crane: A hit jelentése. A VALLÁS EGY ATEISTA SZEMSZÖGÉBŐL Ford. Dranka Anita. Európa, Bp., 2019., 272 old., 3999 Ft Kontra Miklós: Felelős nyelvészet. Gondolat, Bp., 2019. 264 old., 3500 Ft Tóth Csilla: Küzdelem a polgári identitásért. Magyar Irodalomtörténeti Társaság, Bp., 2019. 302 old., 2490 Ft (MIT füzetek VII.) Z. Varga Zoltán: Önéletírás és fikció között: történelmi történetek. L’Harmattan, Bp., 2019. 17 old., 2500 Ft Brave New Hugary. Edited by János Mátyás Kovács and Balázs Trencsényi. Lexington Books, London, 2020. 460 old.; $ 130
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