Hungarian Review

Hungarian Review

OUR AUTHORS

TONY BRINKLEY (Pittsburgh, 1948) is a Professor of English at the University of Maine. He has translated extensively modern Russian, German and French poetry. His poetry and translations have appeared in Another Chicago Magazine, Beloit Poetry Journal, The New Review of Literature, Cerise Press, Drunken Boat, Shofar, May Day, World

OUR AUTHORS

MELINDA BÁNYÁSZ (PhD) – professor of English and Hungarian – was born in 1977 in Kolozsvár (Cluj-Napoca, Romania). She completed her studies in Hungarian Language and Literature, and English Language and Literature, at Babeș-Bolyai University, in her native city. She defended her doctoral thesis in 2013 at the same university,

OUR AUTHORS

MICHEL ANFROL graduated from the faculty of law at the Paris Institute of Political Studies (Sciences-Po). He became member of the Rally of the French People (RPF) in 1950, where he endorsed the role of Secretary General of the party’s youth organisation between 1954 and1955. He is member of the

OUR AUTHORS

ZSÓFIA BOGNÁR (Szeged, 1988) got her BA in Hungarian at the University of Debrecen in 2010 before earning an MA in Art History at Pázmány Péter Catholic University in 2015. She worked for two years as assistant for the Collection of Pre-1800 Sculptures of the Budapest Museum of Fine Arts.

OUR AUTHORS

BERNARD ADAMS was born in 1937 in the Black Country of the English West Midlands. Educated at King Edward’s School, Birmingham, he did his National Service in the regimental band of the Royal Scots Greys, then read Hungarian and Russian at Pembroke College, Cambridge. He was awarded an American PEN

OUR AUTHORS

ISTVÁN DOMONKOS was born in 1940 in Zmajevo (in Hungarian: Ókér). He studied in Subotica (Szabadka) and Novi Sad (Újvidék), worked as a jazz musician, and was an outstanding member of the generation of writers gathered around the periodical Új Symposion. One of the most prominent writers of the Hungarian

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ATTILA BALÁZS (Novi Sad/Újvidék, 1955) is a writer, translator and journalist, author of twelve books of prose and founder of the cultural magazine Ex Symposion. He worked as editor for the YU Radio–Television, then moved to Budapest in 1991. For a time he worked as war correspondent, then as political

OUR AUTHORS

OUR AUTHORS MARK ALMOND (1958). Oxford historian, he has written extensively on post-Communist crises from Bosnia to the Caucasus and comments frequently on international affairs in the British media. He is director of the new Crisis Research Institute, Oxford (CRIOx). He was involved in helping the dissident underground in the