Title of article :
Interwar Hungarian Entertainment Films and the Reinvention of Rural Modernity
Author/Authors :
ANNA MANCHIN، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages :
18
From page :
195
To page :
212
Abstract :
In interwar debates about Hungarian modernity, the countryside played a prominent symbolic role. For conservative nationalists, the Hungarian countryside became a symbol and source of authentic, ʹtraditionalʹ Hungarian national culture, unchanging, hierarchical, ordered society and stable community, and national uniqueness. Entertainment films of the 1930s provided alternative representations of the countryside that upheld the possibility of modernising traditional Hungary. According to the films, modern Hungary would be created at the intersection and out of the cooperation between rural and urban, modern and traditional. The films questioned and challenged the idea that the rural was ʹpureʹ, authentic, untainted, but they also rejected the idea that it was shameful, hopelessly backward, or unable to change. Showing the countryside as both traditional and part of modern mass culture, as both nostalgically stable and an exotic vacationland, the films offered an integrative vision of Hungary which destabilised assumptions of both liberals and conservatives. Popular films used the countryside to provide a unique and alternative vision of modern Hungary that was integrative and reconciliatory; they provided an outlet for a liberal, democratic, capitalist perspective unavailable elsewhere in the public sphere.
Journal title :
Rural History
Serial Year :
2012
Journal title :
Rural History
Record number :
679061
Link To Document :
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