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Antifascism, the 1956 Revolution and the politics of communist autobiographies in Hungary 1944 - 2000 

Author: James Mark a
Affiliation:   a Department of History, University of Exeter,
DOI: 10.1080/09668130600995764
Publication Frequency: 10 issues per year
Published in: journal Europe-Asia Studies, Volume 58, Issue 8 December 2006 , pages 1209 - 1240
Formats available: HTML (English) : PDF (English)
Previously published as: Soviet Studies (0038-5859) until 1993
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Abstract

Using oral history, this contribution explores the reshaping of individuals' public and private autobiographies in response to different political environments. In particular, it analyses the testimony of those who were communists in Hungary between 1945 and 1956, examining how their experiences of fascism, party membership, the 1956 Revolution and the collapse of communism led them in each case to refashion their life stories. Moreover, it considers how their biographies played varying functions at different points in their lives: to express identification with communism, to articulate resistance and to communicate ambition before 1956; to protect themselves from the state after 1956; and to rehabilitate themselves morally in a society which stigmatised them after 1989.


I didn't use this word 'liberation' (felszabadulaacutes), because in 1956 my life really changed. Everybody's lives went through a great change, but mine especially. … I wasn't disgusted with myself that I had called the arrival of the Red Army in 1945 a liberation, but [after 1956] I didn't use it anymore.
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