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portada Making the Hungarian Communist. Political Agitation, Mass Mobilization, and Everyday Life, 1948–1953
Type
Physical Book
Year
2026
Language
Inglés,
Pages
366
Format
Paperback
Dimensions
9.00 x 6.00 cm
ISBN13
9780253076014

Making the Hungarian Communist. Political Agitation, Mass Mobilization, and Everyday Life, 1948–1953

Heléna Huhák;David Robert Evans (Author) · Indiana University Press · Paperback

Making the Hungarian Communist. Political Agitation, Mass Mobilization, and Everyday Life, 1948–1953 - Heléna Huhák;David Robert Evans

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Synopsis "Making the Hungarian Communist. Political Agitation, Mass Mobilization, and Everyday Life, 1948–1953"

How do political parties integrate propaganda into ordinary citizens' lives? After coming into power in 1948, the communist Hungarian Workers' Party (MDP) drew on tried-and-true Soviet methods of political outreach, mobilizing a network of agitators to circulate communist ideology and report their observations back to party leadership. These agitators produced maps, searched homes, and taught "petty bourgeois" self-criticism and "party-conform" love and hate.

Making the Hungarian Communist studies communist propaganda through the everyday actions of these rank-and-file agitators, offering a nuanced portrait of mass mobilization. Through extensive archival research and personal interviews, Heléna Huhák traces the formation of the agitators' network, the training they received, and the often-gendered language they used to connect communist ideology to people's lived experiences. As the dialogue between the state and ordinary citizens developed through these interactions, the boundaries between political issues and private family life began to blur for both citizens and agitators: far from the state's initial vision of one-way political influence, homes also became a space for advocacy, complaint, and bargaining. Communist Hungary was thus shaped not only by propaganda, but also by the experiences and interests of agitators and even "agitated people."

By focusing on the negotiations between local party functionaries and ordinary people, Making the Hungarian Communist reveals how the practices of agitation and propaganda mutually shaped Hungarian society and politics.

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