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Category: VOLUME VI, No. 6

CROSSING THE FRONTIER

For almost a century “crossing the frontier” has been an almost omnipresent metaphor in poetic and intellectual life. That should not perhaps astonish us in the aftermath of a war that first destroyed the frontiers dividing Europe and then drew new ones in the devastated continent. Frontiers and the states

MASS IMMIGRATION: COST OR BENEFIT?

1. IS IMMIGRATION A PROBLEM OR AN OPPORTUNITY? Although the present study frequently refers to Germany, I believe that my conclusions apply more generally to ageing European societies and to the impact of migration from poor to rich countries. Like much of Europe, Germany is an ageing society. The proportion

RUSSIAN GAS IN EUROPE: END OF DEPENDENCE?

Europe’s dependency on Russian energy is sometimes presented as a largely unalterable fact of life when in reality there is much that Europeans can do to reduce this dependency and indeed have already begun to do so. Commentators are also apt to overlook the extent to which market conditions are

NOTES ON THE MODERNISATION OF TURKEY – THE HUNGARIAN CONTRIBUTION

With Nobel Prize winners and businessmen all over the world, with a NATO army and locally produced aircraft, Turkey is easily the most successful Moslem country. But the problems begin with this statement. Have the Turks a native talent for adapting to whichever empire they happen to encounter, in modern

POWER AND ACTION – BETWEEN BETTER AND WORSE

Looking Back on the Regime Change of 1990 – from 1996 Keeping the third part of my Hungarian Review interview series on the governmental work of 1990 on the back burner, in this issue, I have proposed to print one of my unpublished talks from 1996. It is a short

WAR AND ART – PART IV (3)

Memoirs of a Hungarian Childhood Part IV (3) It is instructive to compare Hitler and Churchill as boys in school. Churchill at St George’s School, Ascot (1884). Headmaster’s remarks. General conduct: “very – bad – is a constant trouble to everybody and is always in some scrape. He cannot be

LETTERS BY JOHN MAYNARD KEYNES FROM HUNGARY AND VIENNA

When in the Michaelmas Term of 1911–12 Ferenc Békássy began his studies at King’s College, Cambridge, he was not long in earning the attention of John Maynard Keynes, a Fellow of the College. Keynes was bisexual, before World War I heavily engaging in homosexual affairs, for many years a lover