Genocide in the Carpathians: War, Social Breakdown, and Mass Violence, 1914-1945

Genocide in the Carpathians

War, Social Breakdown, and Mass Violence, 1914-1945

2016 • 232 pages

Genocide in the Carpathians presents the history of Subcarpathian Rus', a multiethnic and multireligious borderland in the heart of Europe. This society of Carpatho-Ruthenians, Jews, Magyars, and Roma disintegrated under pressure of state building in interwar Czechoslovakia and, during World War II, from the onslaught of the Hungarian occupation. Charges of "foreignness" and disloyalty to the Hungarian state linked antisemitism to xenophobia and national security anxieties. Genocide unfolded as a Hungarian policy, and Hungarian authorities committed mass robbery, deportations, and killings against all non-Magyar groups in their efforts to recast the region as part of an ethnonational "Greater Hungary." In considering the events that preceded the German invasion of Hungary in March 1944, this book reorients our view of the Holocaust not simply as a German drive for continent-wide genocide, but as a truly international campaign of mass murder, related to violence against non-Jews unleashed by projects of state and nation building. Focusing on both state and society, Raz Segal shows how Hungary's genocidal attack on Subcarpathian Rus' obliterated not only tens of thousands of lives but also a diverse society and way of life that today, from the vantage point of our world of nation-states, we find difficult to imagine.

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4 released books

Stanford Studies on Central and Eastern Europe

Stanford Studies on Central and Eastern Europe is a 4-book series first released in 2009 with contributions by Holly Case, Serhiy Bilenky, and Dominique Reill.

Between States: The Transylvanian Question and the European Idea during World War II
Romantic Nationalism in Eastern Europe: Russian, Polish, and Ukrainian Political Imaginations
Nationalists Who Feared the Nation
Genocide in the Carpathians: War, Social Breakdown, and Mass Violence, 1914-1945

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