1st Edition

Contested Places, Contested Pasts Sites of Memory and Commemoration in the Hungarian Landscape

By Kenneth E. Foote, Anett Árvay Copyright 2025
300 Pages 104 Color Illustrations
by Routledge

300 Pages 104 Color Illustrations
by Routledge

300 Pages 104 Color Illustrations
by Routledge

Contested Places, Contested Pasts focuses on how the First and Second World Wars, Holocaust, Cold War communist period, and 1956 Uprising have been memorialized and marked in the Hungarian landscape. The book explores the difficult debates surrounding the remembrance and commemoration of these events. This is the first comprehensive, book-length study of Hungary’s commemorative landscapes... Read more

Introduction

 

CHAPTER 1: Inscribing the Past on Place: Theoretical Perspectives on Hungary’s Landscapes of Memory

CHAPTER 2: Key Moments in the Hungarian Past: A Historical Overview

CHAPTER 3: The Many Legacies of the First World War

CHAPTER 4: Confronting Defeat and Loss in the Second World War

CHAPTER 5: Remembering the Holocaust

CHAPTER 6: The Legacies of Communism

CHAPTER 7: The 1956 Uprising

CHAPTER 8: Hungary’s Unquiet Places, Unquiet Pasts

 

Biography

Kenneth E. Foote is a Professor of Geography, Sustainability, Community and Urban Studies at the University of Connecticut. His research focuses on historic preservation, heritage tourism, and the commemorative landscapes of the United States and Europe, especially the way events of violence and tragedy are memorialized. His recent research has also focused on the spatial dimension of racialized and gendered violence in the United States. In addition, Foote is also known for his work in geospatial technologies, especially geovisualization, as well as his efforts to improve professional development opportunities for early career academics and department leaders. Foote is a past president and fellow of the American Association of Geographers (2010–11) and a past president of the US National Council for Geographic Education (2006).  He has received major national and international awards for his research, teaching, mentoring, and service from the American Association of Geographers, the National Council for Geographic Education, the University Consortium for Geographic Information Science, and the Royal Geographical Society.

Anett Árvay was born and raised in Szombathely, Hungary. At the University of Szeged, she earned her BA in Hungarian studies and MA in Hungarian and English language and literature in 1996. She was awarded the PhD, summa cum laude, in applied linguistics at Eötvös Loránd University of Budapest. Currently, Anett is the Director and Lecturer in Hungarian Studies at the University of Szeged, Hungary. Her research endeavors are linked to intercultural pragmatics and to the interdisciplinary field of Hungarian studies, with a special focus on Hungarian public place, political and historical memorials, and commemorative traditions. She also researches methods for introducing Hungarian cultural heritage to foreigners and has designed several study abroad programs, workshops, and cultural awareness trainings for international students from all over the world. Her research has appeared in The Geographical Review, Hungarologia, IRAL, and Acta Linquistica Hungarica, among other professional journals.