Description
About the Author
Balazs Apor is lecturer in European Studies at the Trinity College Dublin.
Reviews
"Apor is most helpful and pertinent regarding the cult's idiosyncratic elements. He is keen to redress the tendency to assume that 'the constructed personae of mini-Stalins in the Soviet bloc were merely clones of Stalin's mythical image'. The spread of leader cults across communist Europe was not just the production of facsimiles. Rather, Apor's analysis of the specifically Hungarian elements of Rakosi's cult, in connection with the overall communist project of recasting national history, is an invaluable contribution to our understanding of what made this regime distinctive. What Apor has concretely given us in The Invisible Shining is an invaluable investigation and analysis, assiduously compiled, of how Rakosi's leader cult was constructed and imposed in Hungary. This was a grandiose utopian project served by most mundane and fallible means. Apor's study will be a sturdy platform for anyone subsequently taking up the study of this brief but fateful cult and regime." * Hungarian Cultural Studies *
"Balazs Apor's book is a very welcome addition to the growing field of research on leader cults in communist countries. The author does not limit himself to analyzing the Rakosi cult in Stalinist Hungary, but also opens up a heuristic dialog with scholarship on the Stalin cult, the Sovietization of Central and Eastern Europe, and nationalism. The result is a well-written, clearly structured, and original monograph that sheds light on the way the periphery of the postwar Soviet sphere of influence functioned and how a crucial feature of Stalinist political culture - the party leader cult, which emerged across the communist world - expanded beyond the Soviet Union." Link to review: https://www.recensio.net/rezensionen/zeitschriften/jahrbucher-fur-geschichte-osteuropas/jgo-e-reviews-2020/3/issue.pdf -- Alexey Tikhomirov * Jahrbucher fur Geschichte Osteuropas *
Book Information
ISBN 9789633861929
Author Balazs Apor
Format Hardback
Page Count 416
Imprint Central European University Press
Publisher Central European University Press
Weight(grams) 695g