Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_H - Hungarian Literature

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 4     61-80 of 93    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Hungarian Literature:     more books (100)
  1. Hungarian literature, an historical & critical survey by Emil Reich by Emil Reich, 2010-08-02
  2. History of Hungarian literature by Tibor Klaniczay, 1964
  3. Swimming in the Ground: Contemporary Hungarian Poetry.(Book Review): An article from: World Literature Today by Robert Murray Davis, 2003-10-01
  4. Hungarian literature ; an historical and critical survey by Emil Reich, 2010-09-10
  5. HUNGARIAN LITERATURE. by EMIL. REICH, 1898-01-01
  6. Albert Wass: Bon?ida, Kingdom of Hungary, Hungarian people, Nobility, Hungarian literature, Poetry, Wass de Czege, War crime, Romanian People's Tribunals, ... Wiesenthal Center, Hungarians in Romania
  7. Hungarian Literature by Emil Reich, 1898
  8. Hungary past and present, embracing its history from the Magyar conquest to the present time. With a sketch of Hungarian literature. by Imre. Szabad, 2010-04-27
  9. HUNGARIAN LITERATURE AND LANGUAGE: An entry from Charles Scribner's Sons' <i>Europe, 1450 to 1789: An Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World</i> by GÁBOR ÁGOSTON, 2004
  10. THE CITY IN MODERN POLISH AND HUNGARIAN POETRY.(Critical Essay): An article from: World Literature Today by George Gomori, 2001-01-01
  11. Hungarian literature; an historical & critical survey by Emil Reich, 2010-07-29
  12. A History of Hungarian Literature by F. Reidl, 1968-06
  13. In the Footsteps of Orpheus: The Life and Times of Miklos Radnoti. (Hungarian).: An article from: World Literature Today by George Gomori, 2001-06-22
  14. Abraham und Isaak: Roman nach der Bibel. (Hungarian).: An article from: World Literature Today by Marianna D. Birnbaum, 2001-06-22

61. Hungarian (Magyar)
The earliest hungarian literature, dating from the 12th century, was in Latin. Hungarianliterature flourished during the 18th and 19th centuries.
http://www.omniglot.com/writing/hungarian.htm
Writing systems: alphabetic syllabic logographic ... A-Z index
Hungarian (Magyar)
Hungarian is an Uralic language with about 15 million speakers in Hungary, Romania, Serbia, Ukraine and Slovakia. There are also many people of Hungarian origin in the UK and other European countries, the USA, Canada and Australia. Hungarian is a highly inflected language in which nouns can have up to 238 possible forms. It is related to Mansi, an Ob-Ugric language with about 4,000 speakers who live in the eastern Urals, and Khanty or Ostyak, the other Ob-Ugric language which is spoken by about 15,000 people in the Ob valley of western Siberia. The earliest Hungarian literature, dating from the 12th century, was in Latin. Texts in Hungarian started to appear during the 13th century. The first book to be printed in Hungarian was published in 1527 in Krakow, Poland. Hungarian literature flourished during the 18th and 19th centuries. Hungarian alphabet Sample text in Hungarian
Translation

All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.

62. Hungarian Literature : An Interesting Arena To Explore. Characters And Myths, Na
hungarian literature An interesting arena to explore. 7. hungarian literatureAn Introductory Bibliography by Albert Tezla. Hardcover (December 1964).
http://databank.oxydex.com/compendium_bibliographium/world_cultures_arts/Hungari
Hungarian Literature : An interesting arena to explore. Characters and myths, national icons, subtle nuances, all appear from the myst to enhance our collected heritage. In the end, we are all very much the same, but the journey varies. Special Item Alerts - These deserve your attention.
Future's Edge

Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone (Widescreen Edition)
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone (Full Screen Edition) The BEST DVDs - Period! ...
Environmental
BIO / BIOCHEM: PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction) Genetics BUSINESS: On-Line Marketing Capital Markets More on Marketing Time Management ... Chinese Economy CARS: BMW SAAB Luxury Cars Automotive Links EDUCATION: Distance Learning Research Online Home Schooling CREATIVITY and INNOVATION
ELECTRONICS: TTL (Transistor-Transistor Logic) Electronic Circuit Design CMOS (Complementary Metal-Oxide-Silicon) New
more MCSE

Asimov

CREATIVITY and INNOVATION

Synthetic Intelligence
...
TriviaTrain

Consider this great treasure by composer Frederic Chopin. Performed by the leading world orchestras. Fredric Chopin - Complete Edition [BOX SET] - A veritable treasure for those who appreciate his genius and mastery.

63. Letteratura Ungherese In Italiano E In Inglese
letteratura ungherese in italiano e in inglese/hungarian literature in Englishand Italian. navigazione olasz ) hungarian literature in inglese.
http://digilander.libero.it/pagnes/letteratura.html
Letteratura ungherese nel mondo:
opere tradotte in lingua italiana o inglese
Su questa pagina vorrei riassumere tutte le fonti di letteratura ungherese (in italiano o inglese) che si trovano nel web. Benvenute tutte le segnalazioni On this page I'd like to put up a database regarding Hungarian literature (in English or in Italian) on the net. Send me links if you know some. Ezen az oldalon szeretném összefoglalni az interneten található forrásokat, magyar irodalmi alkotások fordításokat illetõen. Ha tudsz, küldj nekem linket!
Letteratura ungherese - in italiano
  • Le mie traduzioni
    Osservatorio Letterario Ferrara e l'Altrove

    di Melinda Tamás-Tarr Bonani
    • traduzioni
      • Füst Milán: Addio in versi d'un poeta arabo ellenista (Egy hellenista arab költõ búcsúverse) Tóth Árpád: Vicino al fuoco che soffia (Duruzsoló tûznél)
      • Tóth Árpád: Come un sospiro (Sóhajféle)
      • Móra Ferenc: L’ocarina dal bel suono (Szépen szóló muzsika)
      galleria letteraria
      poesie di: Kassák Lajos, Kemény Géza, Tolnai Bíró Ábel, Melinda Tamás-Tarr; prosa: Móra Ferenc, Anna Jókai, Kate Carry lirica ungherese
      poesie di: Erdélyi József, Kemény Géza, Petõfi Sándor, Tolnai Bíró Ábel, Zubor István

64. Government Portal
Culture hungarian literature. It was not until the 17th century, the Baroqueperiod that hungarian literature caught up with European patterns.
http://www.ekormanyzat.hu/english?kateg=english:1256

65. Endre Ady
With his next book, Új versek (1906), Ady made his breakthroughas a poet, and initiated a revolution in hungarian literature.
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/ady.htm
Choose another writer in this calendar: by name:
A
B C D ... Z by birthday from the calendar Credits and feedback Endre Ady (1877-1919) Poet, journalist, short story writer, who took the role of "the conscience of the Hungarian nation," prophesying spiritual rebirth or pessimistically the destruction of "Everything". Ady is best-known for his daring works celebrating sensual love, but he also wrote religious and revolutionary poems. His expression was radical in form, language and content, mixing eroticism, politics, and biblical style and images with apocalyptic visions. oh I have lived a disgusting life,
oh I have lived a disgusting life;
I shall be such a pretty corpse,
I shall be such a pretty corpse.
(from 'The Last Smile') During these years Ady started to write and consume alcohol seriously. After graduating he entered a law school but abandoned his studies for a newspaper post in Debrecen. Versek In 1903 he published his first significant volume of poetry, , and made frequent visits to Hungary, Italy, and elsewhere. Between the years 1908 and 1919, he was closely associated with the journal Nyugat , which kept him in the public eye. The journal published works from some of the best writers of the era, and took a major role in fostering the emergence of modern Hungarian literature.

66. Imre Kertész
His name was not mentioned in A History of hungarian literature, edited by TiborKlaniczay (1983) and Lóránt Czigány referred to him only casually in The
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/kerte.htm
Choose another writer in this calendar: by name:
A
B C D ... Z by birthday from the calendar Credits and feedback "Auschwitz must have been hanging in the air for a long, long time, centuries, perhaps like a dark fruit slowly ripening in the sparkling rays of innumerable ignominious deeds, waiting to finally drop on one's head." from Kaddish for a Child not Born Imre Kertész was born in Budapest into a family of Jewish descent. At the age of ten he received as a birthday present a diary; its white pages scared him. In his youth Kertész experienced the horrors of the Nazi system. Germans occupied Hungary in 1944 and began exterminating Jews and Gypsies. Kertész was deported together with 7,000 Hungarian Jews from Budapest to Auschwitz and from there to Buchenwald. "I am a nonbelieving Jew", Kertész has said in an interview. "Yet as a Jew I was taken to Auschwitz." There Kertész suddenly realized that he could be killed anywhere at any time. This existentialist moment become crucial for him as a writer. In 1945 he was liberated by the Allied forces. The Stranger was completed in 1965, but not published until 10 years later in a limited edition. The work met a wall of silence, perhaps because of the touchy subject of the book, the deportation of Jews, a.shameful episode in Hungary's recent history. However, the novel started a trilogy, which continued in

67. Hungarian Academy Of Sciences
Main fields of research History of hungarian literature from the beginnings tothe present; literary theory; history of literary criticism; Central and East
http://www.mta.hu/english/kutatohelyek/intezetek/ilsc.htm
Institute of Literary Scholarship
Address: H-1118 Budapest, Ménesi út 11/13 Phone: Fax: Internet: www.iti.mta.hu E-mail: szor@iti.mta.hu mol@iti.mta.hu Director: László Szörényi , D.Sc. Main fields of research: History of Hungarian literature from the beginnings to the present; literary theory; history of literary criticism; Central and East European literature; textology. The Institute is also engaged in editing reference books and bibliographies, in publishing reviews, critical editions and source studies in Hungarian literature.

68. Hungarian Academy Of Sciences
music. Corresponding members. Görömbei, András (Polgár, 1945) CM2001 contemporary and minority hungarian literature. Kara, György
http://www.mta.hu/english/mta/tagok/nyi.htm
Section of Linguistics and Literary Scholarship
H-1051 Budapest, Nádor utca 7
Phone: (36-1) 411 6312
Fax: (36-1) 411 6122
Internet: www.nytud.hu/mtanyio
E-mail: illess@office.mta.hu
Chairman: Ferenc Kiefer , O.M.
Vice-chairman: Miklós Maróth , C.M.
Secretary: Sándor Illés Scientific committees of the Section Committee on Classical Philology
Committee on Cultural History
Committee on Dramatic Studies and Cinematography
Committee on Ethnography Committee on Hungarian Linguistics Committee on Linguistics Committee on Literary Scholarship Committee on Musicology Committee on Oriental Studies Ordinary members Benkõ, Loránd (Nagyvárad, 1921) C.M.: 1965; O.M.: 1976 linguistics Borzsák, István (Monor, 1914) C.M.: 1982; O.M.: 1987 classical philology Hajdú, Péter (Budapest, 1923) C.M.: 1970; O.M.: 1976 Uralic linguistics Deceased: 16 September 2002 Harmatta, János (Hódmezõvásárhely, 1917) C.M.: 1970; O.M.: 1979 classical philology, Indology, Iranistics Hazai, György (Budapest, 1932) C.M.: 1982; O.M.: 1995

69. HUNGARY’S LITERARY PRESENCE IN GERMANY IN 1999 Here Are Two
Hungary as the seeded guest of this year’s Frankfurt Book Fair will be introducedpresent almost every tendency in today’s hungarian literature and culture
http://www.frankfurt.matav.hu/angol/magynem.htm
HUNGARY’S LITERARY PRESENCE IN GERMANY IN 1999
here are two great anniversaries giving frame to the central theme of the Frankfurt Book Fair that is entitled “Hungary without Boundaries”. In the year 2000 Hungary celebrates the millennium of the formation of the state – it was a thousand years ago that Pope Sylvester sent the crown to Saint Stephen, our first king. Hungarians, that in major part were still heathens, were then admitted to belong to the Christian Europe. The other jubilee could be summed up by the expression “ten years of democracy and European integration”. After communist leader János Kádár resented his position in April 1989 the gradual and sometimes conflict-evoking formation of democratic institutions and political parties as well as the gradual decomposition of the communist dictatorship started. The Hungarian Republic was proclaimed on 23 rd October 1989 and the first free elections after those in 1947 were run in March/April 1990.

70. FACTS AND FIGURES OF HUNGARIAN BOOK PUBLISHING Aking Into
Their support frameprogrammes focus on hungarian literature beingtranslated into foreign languages. This is the only way to be
http://www.frankfurt.matav.hu/angol/tenyekszamok.htm
FACTS AND FIGURES OF HUNGARIAN BOOK PUBLISHING aking into consideration the financial demands of book publishing it is clear that a diversified support system and a better use of existing resources can greatly increase the number of books in print. Despite the slightly decreasing number of new publications, the turnover of Hungarian book publishing has doubled and the number of new titles has also increased to a great extent. In 1997, the publishing of some 10,000 new works had been a good result even on in international comparison. The number of books published in 1998 had the following breakdown:
  • Literature: 2049 Books on natural science: 1435 Books of social science: 711 Youth literature: 510 Textbooks: 1119 Other books: 2182
The internationally high number of publishers has today decreased to satisfy only real needs of the market. A publishing company is considered to be "big", if it publishes more than 100 titles a year. Today, there are 20 such publishers in Hungary, giving 60% of the whole trade. Small publishers have 15-20 new books issued a year, which constitutes 30% of the book-market. The remaining 10% are published by private individuals or by self-governing bodies. Having overcome the initial difficulties, the situation of publishers has improved and became stable, so they even manage to compete on the international markets.

71. Central Europe Review - Hungarians Read Their Way To Success
The German press was full of articles on Hungary and hungarian literature fora whole week, said Istvan Bart, president of the Hungarian Publishers and
http://www.ce-review.org/99/24/chapman24.html
Vol 1, No 24
6 December 1999
B O O K S:
Hungarians Read Their Way To Success Carolyn Chapman The book publishing industry in Hungary is at its most successful point yet since the collapse of Communism, and according to Bart, business has been booming for two years and new money is being invested on all levels. The Frankfurt Fair is good for a small country like Hungary because it places Hungarian literature in the spotlight of the international book world, therefore prompting foreign translations of Hungarian books. Three hundred new translations have been published for the Fair, according to Katalin Budai, literary advisor at the Frankfurt '99 non profit organization (established by the Ministry of National Cultural Heritage to organize the Fair), which was possible because of a fund organized to boost translations of Hungarian literature. "Hungary was the first guest country ever able to produce so many titles," said Budai proudly. "It was a very good start for writers who aren't known yet in German and English speaking countries." Almost two thirds of the world's annual turnover in publishing is contracted at Frankfurt. The buying and selling of rights is one of the main activities, but the Fair is also important for keeping abreast of the international markets. "It's a huge market out there and Frankfurt was a key time to reach the international market," said David Kelly, sales and marketing manager of Central European University (CEU) Press, which specializes in publishing in the English language. "It was very important for the buying and selling of rights and if they have the right book and they do it properly, the rewards can be huge."

72. Central Eurasian Studies - Dual CEUS MA/SPEA MPA Degree Requirements
Central Asia Hungarian Region U345 FinnoUgric Mythology and Folklore U370 UralicPeoples U423 Hungary Between 1890 and 1945 U424 hungarian literature to 1900
http://www.indiana.edu/~ceus/dual ceusspea2.htm
Central Eurasian Studies
Dual Central Eurasian Studies MA and School of Public and Environmental Affairs MPA Degree Requirements
The Department of Central Eurasian Studies (CEUS) and the School of Public and Environmental Affairs (SPEA) jointly offer a three-year program that qualifies students for a dual master’s degree. The dual degree program is a 60 credit hour program which addresses the demand for specialists who combine expertise in public policy and management and area studies expertise in the countries of Eurasia. Students must separately apply to and be accepted into both the CEUS Master of Arts degree program and the SPEA Master of Public Affairs degree program. Indicate on both application forms that you are applying for the CEUS-SPEA dual degree. Because CEUS and SPEA are in separate schools within Indiana University, students will be officially enrolled in only one school at a time. Students will alternate school affiliation so that students will be formally "housed" in each school for three semesters. School affiliation in no way restricts course enrollment. Students can concurrently enroll in CEUS and SPEA courses. Do you have a question? Check out the

73. University Graduate School
U370 Uralic Peoples U394 Islam in the Former Soviet Union U423 Hungary between 1890and 1945 U424 hungarian literature from Its Beginnings to 1900 U426 Modern
http://www.indiana.edu/~grdschl/grdblt/iaus.html
Home University Graduate School Bulletin Degree Listings ...
Inner Asian and Uralic Studies
College of Arts and Sciences Bloomington
Director Associate Professor William Fierman (Central Eurasian Studies)
Center E-mail: iaunrc@indiana.edu
Center URL http://www.indiana.edu/~iaunrc
Distinguished Professor Denis Sinor (Emeritus, Central Eurasian Studies)
Professors
Associate Professors Curtis Bonk (Education), Jamsheed K. Choksy (Near Eastern Languages and Cultures), Devin DeWeese (Central Eurasian Studies), Ben Eklof (History), William Fierman (Central Eurasian Studies), Michael Hamburger (Geological Sciences), Owen V. Johnson (Journalism), Michael Kaganovich (Economics), Dodona Kiziria* (Slavic Languages and Literatures), Paul Losensky* (Central Eurasian Studies), Larry Moses (Emeritus, Central Eurasian Studies), Jan Nattier (Religious Studies), Martha Nyikos (Education), Kemal Silay (Central Eurasian Studies), Elliot Sperling (Central Eurasian Studies)
Assistant Professors Matthew R. Auer* (Public and Environmental Affairs), Maria Bucur* (History)

74. Untitled
Uzhgorod Transcarpathian Regional Versatile Scientific Librarv - at the Departmentof Foreign Literature there is a hungarian literature Section.
http://www.niss.gov.ua/book/mitr/014.htm
Cultural life of ethnic minorities Total number of amateur theatres, theatrical studios, theatrical groups in the region: 142 Out of them. 4 amateur theatres, theatrical studios, theatrical groups of ethnic minorities (out of that 2 Romanian, I German. I Slovak). Total number of amateur choirs in the region: 749 Out of them 28 amateur choirs of ethnic minorities (including 24 Hungarian, 2 Romanian. 2 Slovak). Total number of amateur dance groups in the region: 303 Out of them 100 dance groups of ethnic minorities (93 Hungarian, 3 Romanian, 3 Slovak. I German). Total number of amateur musical ensembles in the region: 270 Out of them 40 amateur musical ensembles of ethnic minorities (out of that 23 Hungarian, 9 Roma, 5 Slovaks, 3 Romanians. Total number of libraries in the region: 588 Out of that 5 with literature in languages of ethnic minorities (besides Russian) Serving in languages: Hungarian - 98 (Berehovo district 37, Vinogradov district 25, Rakhiv district 5, Tyachev district 4, Uzhgorod district 23, Khust district 3, Mukachevo district - 1; German - 5 (Mukachevo district 5): Slovak - 4 (Perechyn district - 1. Uzhgorod dist-rict - 3);

75. EXISTENTIA: Title Index
AND BESINNUNG, X(6988). EDMUND HUSSERL IN hungarian literature (BIBLIOGRAPHYFROM 1925 TO 2000), XI(219-240). EDUCATION IN THE GRIP
http://www.existentia.hu/Existentia_title_Index.html

English
Deutsch Francais Italiano ... Magyar Index of English Titles A COGITATIVE POET "IN THE CLEARING OF UNCONCEALMENT" [Review] VI-VII(393-403) A PHENOMENOLOGICAL ACCOUNT OF THE «ONTOLOGICAL PROBLEM OF SPACE» XII(345-364) ABOUT THE CONCEPT OF «GRASPING» IN SOME TRADITIONAL PHILOSOPHERS XII(407-412) III-IV(839-845) I(307-308) II(643-647) XII(209-218) [Review] III-IV(631-632) [Review] VI-VII(373-377) ART AS FORCEWORK XI(355-371) ART, IDENTITY, AND REDEMPTION IN NIETZSCHE'S PHILOSOPHICAL DEVELOPMENT III-IV(175-189) ART'S ENIGMA: ADORNO AND ISER ON INTERPRETATION XII(155-168) AUSEINANDERSETZUNG IN THE THINKING OF BE-ING X(1-10) XII(413-427) DAS GEWESEN VI-VII(1-17) CICERO AND THE "SOMNIUM SCIPIONIS" V(47-57) CULTURE CLOWNS: ON A TOUR WITH NIETZSCHE AND HEIDEGGER XI(267-276) DECISION, DILEMMA, AND DISPOSITION: THE INCARNATEDNESS OF ETHICAL ACTION (HEIDEGGER AND ETHICS)

76. The Scientific Fields And Branches Related Departments 1. Natural
Department of Old hungarian literature. Department of Human Geography. Departmentof Old hungarian literature. Department of Modern Hungarian History.
http://www.uni-miskolc.hu/uni/res/fsu.html
Fields of Science at the University The scientific fields and branches Related Departments 1. Natural sciences Mathematical- and accounting sciences Department of Descriptive Geometry Department of Fluid and Heat Engineering Institute of Mathematics Institute of Business Information and Methods Physical sciences Department of Fluid and Heat Engineering Department of Non-Ferrous Metallurgy Department of Physical Chemistry Department of Physics ... Department of Quality Chemical sciences Research Insitute of Applied Chemistry Department of Analytical Chemistry Department of Non-Ferrous Metallurgy Department of Physical Chemistry ... Department of Quality Earth sciences Research Insitute of Applied Chemistry Department of Mineralogy and Petrology Department of Mining and Geotechnical Engineering Department of Process Engineering ... Department of Physical Geography and Environmental Sciences Environmental sciences Research Insitute of Applied Chemistry Department of Analytical Chemistry Department of Fluid and Heat Engineering Department of Mineralogy and Petrology ... Department of Physical Geography and Environmental Sciences Multidisciplinary natural sciences Department of Analytical Chemistry Department of Fluid and Heat Engineering Department of Non-Ferrous Metallurgy Department of Natural Gas Engineering ... Department of Physical Geography and Environmental Sciences Engineering Electrical engineering sciences Department of Automation Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering Material engineering sciences and technologies Department of Descriptive Geometry Department of Analytical Chemistry Department of Mining and Geotechnical Engineering Department of Process Engineering Department of Energy Utilisation

77. Rutgers: Institute For Hungarian Studies
Könyvtár) is a virtual library with over 3100 items, including highlights fromthe history of hungarian literature (some of it even in English translation).
http://hi.rutgers.edu/hunsite.html
Go to the RomaPage, an online resource on central Europe's Romany world (with some materials in English)
Here is a link to the website of a coalition of Hungarian environmental organizations, the Clean Air Action Group.
Budapest
is listed by UNESCO as a World Heritage City See it for yourself here
Inside Out: An online exhibit of photographs taken by 40 homeless people in Budapest. Pallas' Great Lexicon , the first such endeavor published in Hungarian from local sources (i.e., not as a lexicon translated from German or French, etc.) was published between the years 1893 and 1897. Now its entire material, with about 150,000 searchable entries, is available online.
There are two major projects that offer the most important texts of Hungarian culture on the web. Supported by the the Neumann House , the website of the Hungarian computer association. Once fully operational, this site promises to carry a cross-section of the best Hungarian literature.
(This page is refreshed every once in a while: please visit again!) http://www.hix.com/

78. T H E  H A R R I M A N  I N S T I T U T E
culture. CAROL ROUNDS Lecturer in Hungarian 502 Hamilton, 8540746hungarian literature, film and culture, literary translation. IVAN
http://www.sipa.columbia.edu/REGIONAL/HI/faculty.html
T h e H a r r i m a n I n s t i t u t e F a c u l t y BRADLEY F. ABRAMS
Assistant Professor of History
1230 IAB, 854-6287
Cultural and Intellectual History of East Central Europe MIHAELA M. ALBU
Lecturer in Romanian Language and Culture
IAB 1225, 854-4627
Romanian language pedagogy KAREN BARKEY
Associate Professor of Sociology
414 Fayerweather Hall, 854-3692
Comparative historical sociology, political sociology EDWARD BELIAEV
Adjunct Assistant Professor of International Affairs 1228A IAB, 854-8624
Political developments and the media in Russia and former Soviet Union ROBERT L. BELKNAP Professor of Russian Director, Columbia University Seminars 305 Faculty House, 854-2389 Dostoevsky, literary theory, novelistic and dramatic plots ANTONINA BEREZOVENKO Adjunct Associated Professor, Dept. of Slavic Languages of Political Science 708 Hamilton Hall, 854-3941 Ukrainian language and literature THOMAS P. BERNSTEIN

79. Hungarian-slav.html
hungarian literature Saturday morning. Room Gr. Sen. 900930. IbolyaTar, Jószef Attila Tudományegyetem, Klasszika-Filológiai
http://www.geocities.com/athens/aegean/5842/hungarian-slav.html
HUNGARIAN LITERATURE Saturday morning Room: Gr. Sen.
Ibolya Tar,
SLAVIC LITERATURES Saturday morning Room: Gr. Sen.
Czech
Lubor Kysucan,
"Antikerezeption in Tschechischer Literatur des 20. Jahrhunderts"
Polish
Elzbieta Wesolowska, Adam Mickiewicz University Poznan, Institute of Classics, Poznan, Poland
"The image of Socrates in modern Polish literature (19th and 20th centuries)"
COFFEE BREAK
Russian Tatiana V. Artemieva, Russian Academy of Sciences, Institute of Human Studies, St. Petersburg, Russia "The Classical Plot in Russian 18th Century Philosophy" Mikhail I. Mikeshin, Russian Academy of Sciences, Institute for the History of Science and Technology, St. Petersburg, Russia "Greek Symbols of a Russian Aristocrat at the Imperial Age" Elena Konstantinovna Sozina, Ural State University, Faculty of Philology, Ekaterinburg, Russia "Gnostic Tradition in Russian Symbolism"

80. 2003-2004 Faculty Of Arts And Science Calendar
Readings in Hungarian. (Offered in alternate years). HUN320Y1 A Surveyof hungarian literature 52S. A chronological study of the development
http://www.artsandscience.utoronto.ca/ofr/calendar/crs_HUN.htm
HUN Hungarian Courses
Course Winter Timetable
Elementary Hungarian 130P
The basic features and logic of the language. Development of conversational skills and the reading of easy texts. Open only to students with little or no knowledge of Hungarian. (Offered in alternate years)
Intermediate Hungarian 104P
Review of descriptive grammar; studies in syntax; vocabulary building; intensive oral practice; composition; reading and translation. (Offered in alternate years)
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor
Advanced Language Studies 52S
A synchronic and diachronic survey of the Hungarian language. Conceptualized summary of grammar, syntax, and stylistics; studies in the genesis and historical stages of the language. Brief consideration of living dialects, the basics of poetics; selected problems in translation and language teaching. Readings in Hungarian. (Offered in alternate years)
A Survey of Hungarian Literature 52S
A chronological study of the development of Hungarian literature since the 12th century; emphasis both on outstanding writers and on significant movements or themes. Transformations of ideas and changes in language and style. Readings in Hungarian. (Offered in alternate years)
Hungarian Cinema 26S
Developments until the sixties; auteurism of the sixties (Jancsó, Szabó); documentarism of the seventies (Mészáros); new trends since the eighties. Relations with the European cinema; contributions to the international film world and to film theory. (Offered in alternate years)

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 4     61-80 of 93    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

free hit counter