Cornell University Press
Backyard Revolution
About this book
Backyard Revolution contributes in-depth sociocultural histories of the popular antisemitic pogroms that shook Hungary in the spring and summer of 1946. Expanding the scope of investigation of serial mass violence toward Jewish communities beyond the cases in Poland suggests that antisemitic violence was general in postwar Central and Eastern Europe and that it spoke to central components of popular notions of society and politics.
Péter Apor gives new impetus to rethink the explanations of collective violence, including antisemitic ones. He considers collective violence as a particular form of political participation and examines post-Holocaust antisemitic violence as one of its perverse ways. Drawing on previously unknown archival sources, Backyard Revolution explores how collective violence produced categories and divisions in society and how these in turn attempted to shape the institutions of the state. It further addresses the political participation of powerless groups and highlights components of everyday life and resistance that engendered power structures and hierarchies. These important theoretical premises concerning the subaltern politics provide a new template for understanding the emergence of communist dictatorships in Central and Eastern Europe.
Setting the genesis of communist dictatorships at the crossroads of popular expectations toward the state, anchored to the culture of the everyday, and elites' attempts to mobilize mass support, Backyard Revolution has implications beyond regional borders and adds to the understanding of growing populist governance worldwide.
Author / Editor information
Péter Apor is a permanent research fellow at the Research Centre for the Humanities, Budapest and author of Fabricating Authenticity in Soviet Hungary. His research focuses on the history of empires and colonialism in the Cold War, the politics of memory in post-1945 Europe, and the mechanisms of collective violence and ethnic hatred.
Reviews
From the opening drama through the closing inventory of collective violence, responsibility, and social implications, Backyard Revolution is exceptionally erudite and a compelling page-turner. Apor offers a striking reevaluation of the postwar emergence of communist dictatorships in Central and Eastern Europe and a new template for understanding that emergence.
Paul Hanebrink, author of In Defense of Christian Hungary:
Backyard Revolution is a brilliantly conceived reconsideration of antisemitic riots in postwar Hungary. Péter Apor draws on breathtaking archival research to write a magisterial history of collective violence that takes seriously the actions and imaginations of rural people, peasants, and industrial workers at the dawn of a new age.
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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Acknowledgments
vii -
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List of Abbreviations
ix -
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Map of Hungary, 1946
x -
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Map of Central and Eastern Europe, 1946
xi -
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Introduction: Collective Violence in Postwar Hungary
1 -
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Chapter 1 The Culture and Politics of Food
23 -
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Chapter 2 The Body as a Social and a Political Category
65 -
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Chapter 3 The People, Politics, and Culture of the Everyday
122 -
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Chapter 4 The Revolution and Political Participation
160 -
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Chapter 5 The Jew, Social Imagination, and Antisemitism
221 -
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Chapter 6 The Fascists and Postwar Democracy
264 -
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Epilogue Subaltern Politics and the Everyday
288 -
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Bibliography
297 -
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Index
319