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list price: $85.00
edition:Hardcover
also available: Paperback
category: Social Science
published: Jun 1997
ISBN:9780774806237
publisher: UBC Press

Hungarian Rhapsodies

Essays on Ethnicity, Identity, and Culture

by Richard Teleky

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Description

 

Like the renowned American writer Edmund Wilson, who began to learn Hungarian at the age of 65, Richard Teleky started his study of that difficult language as an adult. Unlike Wilson, he is a third-generation Hungarian-American with a strong desire to understand how his ethnic background has affected the course of his life. "Exploring my ethnicity," he writes, "became a way of exploring the arbitrary nature of my own life. It was not so much a search for roots as for a way of understanding rootlessness -- how I stacked up against another way of being." He writes with clarity, perception, and humour about a subject of importance to many Americans -- reconciling their contemporary identity with a heritage from another country.

 

About the Author

Richard Teleky, a professor of humanities at York University, lives in Toronto. His 1998 novel, The Paris Years of Rosie Kamin, was named one of the best books of the year by the Philadelphia Inquirer and the Toronto Star. It also won the prestigious American "Harold Ribalow Prize" for the best novel of the year.

Contributor Notes

Richard Teleky is administrator of the creative writing program, York University, Toronto. He is the editor of The Oxford Book of French-Canadian Short Stories and the author of Goodnight, Sweetheart and Other Stories, and Pack Up the Moon.

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