Rift and Revolt in Hungary : : Nationalism versus Communism / / Ferenc A. Váli.

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter HUP e-dition: Complete eBook Package
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Place / Publishing House:Cambridge, MA : : Harvard University Press, , [2013]
©1961
Year of Publication:2013
Edition:Reprint 2014
Language:English
Series:Publications Written Under the Auspices of the Center for International Affairs, Harvard University
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Physical Description:1 online resource (590 p.) :; 3 charts, 1 map
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Table of Contents:
  • Frontmatter
  • FOREWORD
  • AUTHOR’S PREFACE
  • CONTENTS
  • 1. Summons to the Kremlin
  • 2. The Historical Setting: Expansionism and Satellitism
  • 3. The Communists Take Over
  • THE FIRST PHASE. Hotbed of Conflicts: The Stalinist Dictatorship 1949–1953
  • 4. Party and State
  • 5. Security Police: Purges and Terror
  • 6. The Army of a Satellite
  • 7. Economics in Stalinist Hungary
  • THE SECOND PHASE. Dual Leadership — Conflicting Policies 1953–1955
  • 8. The Gladiators Square Off
  • 9. Rivalry of Party and State
  • 10. The Third Party Congress and the People’s Patriotic Front
  • 11. Economic Problems of the New Course
  • 12. Political Prisoners — Liability and Peril
  • 13. About-face in Moscow: Nagy’s Fall
  • THE THIRD PHASE. Single Leadership — Divided Party 1955–1956
  • 14. Rákosi Sole Master — but with Strings Attached
  • 15. Imre Nagy: “Withdrawal” and “Return”
  • 16. The Eager Flock of an Unsuspecting Shepherd
  • 17. Effect Beyond Intent — Impact of the Twentieth Party Congress
  • 18. Rákosi’s Fall
  • THE FOURTH PHASE. The Revolution. 1956
  • 19. Rajk’s Body and Imre Nagy’s Return
  • 20. Yugoslavia Complies—Poland Rises—Hungary Revolts
  • 21. Party and Government during the Revolution
  • 22. Hungarian Armed Forces during the Revolution
  • 23. Revolutionaries and Revolutionary Institutions
  • 24. Foreign Factors: The Soviet Union, Yugoslavia, and Suez
  • 25. The Second Soviet Intervention — Kádár versus Nagy
  • THE FIFTH PHASE. Aftermath of a Revolution. 1957–1961
  • 26. Consolidation, Restoration, and Repression
  • 27. The New “New Party” and Its Government
  • 28. Means of Coercion and Control: Soviet and Domestic
  • 29. Synchronizing a Satellite
  • 30. International Implications of the Hungarian Situation
  • Nationalism versus Communism
  • 31. Nationalism versus Communism
  • Bibliography
  • Notes
  • Index