All Stories

  1. Exploring Transylvania: Geographies of Knowledge and Entangled Histories in a Multiethnic Province, 1790–1918, by Borbála Zsuzsanna Török
  2. Gerald V. O’Brien. Framing the Moron: The Social Construction of Feeble-Mindedness in the American Eugenic Era. (Disability History.) x + 203 pp., bibl., index. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2016. £14.99 (paper).
  3. Romanian Eugenic Sub-Culture and the Allure of Biopolitics, 1918–39
  4. book review
  5. Rózsa, Dávid, Ed-in-Chief. 2014. Portrék a magyar statisztika és népességtudomány történetéből - életrajzi lexikon a XVI. századtól napjainkig ('Portraits from the History of Hungarian Statistics and Demography – A Biographical Lexicon from the Sixteen...
  6. Holy Legionary Youth: Fascist Activism in Interwar Romania. Holy Legionary Youth: Fascist Activism in Interwar Romania. By Roland Clark. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2015. xiii, 271 pp. Bibliography. Index. 11 illustrations. $39.95, hard bound.
  7. Urologie und Nationalsozialismus. Eine Studie zu Medizin und Politik als Ressourcen füreinander - by Matthis Krischel
  8. Eugenics, History of
  9. Eugenics as a Basis of Population Policy
  10. The ambiguous victim: Miklós Nyiszli's narrative of medical experimentation in Auschwitz-Birkenau
  11. Debating Eugenics
  12. Eugenics Triumphant
  13. Eugenics and Nation in Early 20th Century Hungary
  14. Prologue
  15. Epilogue
  16. Conclusions
  17. Introduction
  18. Towards National Eugenics
  19. A New Dawn
  20. At a Crossroads
  21. The Fall of the Race
  22. Health Anxieties and War
  23. In Pursuit of Greater Hungary: Eugenic Ideas of Social and Biological Improvement, 1940–1941
  24. Crafting a Healthy Nation: European Eugenics in Historical Context
  25. Crafting Humans
  26. In search of racial types: soldiers and the anthropological mapping of the Romanian nation, 1914–44
  27. Andras Gero, Public Space in Budapest: The History of Kossuth Square
  28. Nationalizing Eugenics: The Hungarian Public Debate of 1910–1911
  29. Historical Writing in the Balkans
  30. Doing anthropology in wartime and war zones edited by Johler, Reinhard, Christian Marchetti and Monique Scheer
  31. Modernism and Eugenics
  32. Eugenics and Biopolitics, 1933–1940
  33. Conclusion: Towards an Epistemology of Eugenic Knowledge
  34. Eugenic Technologies of National Improvement, 1918–1933
  35. Introduction: Context and Methodology
  36. The Pathos of Science, 1870–1914
  37. War: The World’s Only Hygiene, 1914–1918
  38. Introduction: Whither race? Physical anthropology in post-1945 Central and Southeastern Europe
  39. Entangled traditions of race: Physical anthropology in Hungary and Romania, 1900–1940
  40. Searching for Goran. By Ilinca Zarifopol-Johnston. Ed. Kenneth R. Johnston. Foreword, Matei Calinescu. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2009. xxiii, 284 pp. Appendixes. Notes. Bibliography. Chronology. Index. Photographs. Maps. $27.95, hard bound.
  41. Between States: The Transylvania Question and the European Idea during World War II. By Holly Case. Stanford: Stanford University Press. 2009. xix, 349 pp. Notes. Index. Illustrations. Photographs. Tables. Maps. $60.00, hard bound.
  42. The Biology of War: Eugenics in Hungary, 1914–1918
  43. “To End the Degeneration of a Nation”: Debates on Eugenic Sterilization in Inter-war Romania
  44. NEW PERSPECTIVES ON RACE AND EUGENICS
  45. Conservative Palingenesis and Cultural Modernism
  46. Politics, Religion, Gender, and Historiography: Eastern European Perspectives
  47. Preface and Acknowledgements
  48. ‘Clerical Fascism’ in Interwar Europe: An Introduction
  49. The Nation as Object: Race, Blood, and Biopolitics in Interwar Romania
  50. Race, Politics and Nationalist Darwinism in Hungary, 1880–1918
  51. Eugenics and the Welfare State: Sterilization Policy in Norway, Sweden, Denmark, and Finland (review)
  52. From craniology to serology: Racial anthropology in interwar Hungary and Romania*
  53. ‘A New Religion’? Eugenics and Racial Scientism in Pre‐First World War Hungary
  54. Social Hygiene and Public Health in Hungary and Romania, 1920–1940
  55. New perspectives on Romanian fascism: themes and options
  56. Review: Eugenics and Modernization in Interwar Romania
  57. 'The Magyars: A Ruling Race': The Idea of National Superiority in Fin-de-Sie ¤ cle Hungary
  58. Debating Eugenics
  59. Eugenics Triumphant
  60. Towards National Eugenics
  61. Prologue
  62. Introduction
  63. Conclusions
  64. Epilogue
  65. A New Dawn
  66. At a Crossroads
  67. Health Anxieties and War
  68. The Fall of the Race
  69. Nationalizing Eugenics
  70. Marius Turda Imagined Geographies of Race: Hungary and Romania, 1900-1940