PL EN RU
Maintaining momentum: Tempospatial orientations among members of the Hungarian Momentum Movement Party towards a new political morale
 
Подробнее
Скрыть детали
1
Utrecht University
 
 
Дата публикации: 2023-01-26
 
 
Studia Politologiczne 2022;66
 
КЛЮЧЕВЫЕ СЛОВА:
СТАТЬЯ:
Providing insight in political reality and morale beyond increasingly illiberal governments in CEE, this paper offers an ethnographic perspective on democratic opposition during the process of de-democratisation. Analysing the motivation and purpose of being politically active based on a limited group of members of the Hungarian Momentum Movement Party, it highlights how relating to past, present and future as well as other Hungarian parties and the West they strive to realise a ‘21st century European normality’.
PEER REVIEW INFORMATION
Article has been screened for originality
 
ЛИТЕРАТУРА (16)
1.
Bogaards M., De-democratization in Hungary: diffusely defective democracy, «Democratization» 2018, No 25:8.
 
2.
Bryant R., Knight D.M., The Anthropology of the Future, Cambridge University Press 2019.
 
3.
Fehérváry K., Politics in Color and Concrete: Socialist Materialities and the Middle Class in Hungary, Indiana University Press 2013.
 
4.
Holesch A., Kyriazi A., Democratic backsliding in the European Union: the role of the Hungarian-Polish coalition, «East European Politics» 2022, No 38:1.
 
5.
Jansen S., Yearnings in the Meantime. ‘Normal Lives’ and the State in a Sarajevo Apartment Complex, Berghahn Books 2015.
 
6.
Krasztev P., Til J. Van (eds.), The Hungarian Patient. Social Opposition to an Illiberal Democracy, Central European University Press 2015.
 
7.
Malinowski B., Argonauts of the Western Pacific: An account of native enterprise and adventure in the archipelagos of Melanesian New Guinea, Taylor & Francis 2005 [1922].
 
8.
Nadkarni M., Remains of Socialism: Memory and the Futures of the Past in Postsocialist Hungary, Cornell University Press 2020.
 
9.
Peterson M.A., In Search of Anti-Structure: The Meaning of Tahrir Square in Egypt’s ongoing Social Drama, [in:] A. Horvath, B. Thomassen, H. Wydra (eds.), Breaking Boundaries: Varieties of Liminality, Berghahn Books 2015.
 
10.
Pogátsa Z., Hungary: From Star Transition Student to Backsliding Member State, «Journal of Contemporary European Research» 2009, No 5:4.
 
11.
Rausing S., Re-constructing the ‘Normal’: Identity and the Consumption of Western Goods in Estonia, [in:] R. Mandel, C. Humphrey (eds.), Markets and Moralities, Berg 2002.
 
12.
Sata R., Karolewski I.P., Caesarean politics in Hungary and Poland, «East European Politics» 2019, No 36:2.
 
13.
Schatzki T.R., The Timespace of Human Activity. On Performance, Society, and History as Indeterminate Teleological Events, Lexington Books 2010.
 
14.
Schatzki T.R., Social Change in A Material World, Routledge 2019.
 
15.
Turner V., The Ritual Process. Structure and Anti-Structure, Aldine Transaction 2011.
 
16.
Van Gennep A., The Rites of Passage, The University of Chicago Press 1960.
 
ISSN:1640-8888
Journals System - logo
Scroll to top