This paper focuses on the set of ideological means and systems of scholarly argumentation presented by the field of geographical science between the two world wars in an attempt to prove the unity of the Hungarian national space and demonstrate the impracticability of the spatial confines within which the state had to exist due to the ruling implemented after the Paris Peace Treaty. Specifically, I will elaborate on the geographical myths used to legitimize the so-called Hungarian state space, with special attention devoted to ethnic mapping as an ethno-political device and means of articulating discourses of power discourse
This study is about how Transylvania, the multiethnic region that was once part of the Hungarian Kin...
This article provides an introduction to the scholarly career of Sándor Radó (1899-1981), one of the...
Geographies of Nationhood examines the meteoric rise of ethnographic mapmaking in the nineteenth and...
After World War II, Hungary became a part of the Soviet occupation zone, with a brief provisional ...
The history and geography of science offer ample evidence of how those in power try to control knowl...
The Zsebatlasz [‘Pocket Atlas’] series published in Hungary between 1909 and 1919 was a business ven...
In the spring of 1919, shortly after the communist takeover in Hungary, the old leadership of HGS (l...
This article examines a recent example of symbolic geography and attempts to analyse the practice of...
Following Hungary’s serious losses of territory after World War I, geography becameregarded as a maj...
This article represents an attempt to analyse the political desiderata underlying the activities of ...
The Zsebatlasz [‘Pocket Atlas’] series published in Hungary between 1909 and 1919 was a business ven...
The emphasis between theoretical, global and regional geography, proportion from research to publica...
Central Europe, Eastern Europe, the Balkans and Southeast Europe as macro- region space concepts are...
Reflecting on both the personal and intellectual factors that influenced this thematic cluster on sp...
This thesis investigates the European geographical imagination of language in Central Asia from the ...
This study is about how Transylvania, the multiethnic region that was once part of the Hungarian Kin...
This article provides an introduction to the scholarly career of Sándor Radó (1899-1981), one of the...
Geographies of Nationhood examines the meteoric rise of ethnographic mapmaking in the nineteenth and...
After World War II, Hungary became a part of the Soviet occupation zone, with a brief provisional ...
The history and geography of science offer ample evidence of how those in power try to control knowl...
The Zsebatlasz [‘Pocket Atlas’] series published in Hungary between 1909 and 1919 was a business ven...
In the spring of 1919, shortly after the communist takeover in Hungary, the old leadership of HGS (l...
This article examines a recent example of symbolic geography and attempts to analyse the practice of...
Following Hungary’s serious losses of territory after World War I, geography becameregarded as a maj...
This article represents an attempt to analyse the political desiderata underlying the activities of ...
The Zsebatlasz [‘Pocket Atlas’] series published in Hungary between 1909 and 1919 was a business ven...
The emphasis between theoretical, global and regional geography, proportion from research to publica...
Central Europe, Eastern Europe, the Balkans and Southeast Europe as macro- region space concepts are...
Reflecting on both the personal and intellectual factors that influenced this thematic cluster on sp...
This thesis investigates the European geographical imagination of language in Central Asia from the ...
This study is about how Transylvania, the multiethnic region that was once part of the Hungarian Kin...
This article provides an introduction to the scholarly career of Sándor Radó (1899-1981), one of the...
Geographies of Nationhood examines the meteoric rise of ethnographic mapmaking in the nineteenth and...