Versions of Triangular Desire in Hungarian Literature: Reading Sándor Márai and Péter Nádas

Two Hungarian authors, Sándor Márai and Péter Nádas, seem to have one thing in common: their attraction to triangular relationships. Written between 1935 and 1942 and portraying human relations in pre-World War II Hungary, Márai’s two novels and one drama all turn on a very specific triangular struc...

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Main Author: Enikő Bollobás
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University Library System, University of Pittsburgh 2018-08-01
Series:Hungarian Cultural Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ahea.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/ahea/article/view/321
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spelling doaj-1bf171b01a1b4857a5bd38402d82eed72020-11-25T02:45:42ZengUniversity Library System, University of PittsburghHungarian Cultural Studies2471-965X2018-08-01110485610.5195/ahea.2018.321310Versions of Triangular Desire in Hungarian Literature: Reading Sándor Márai and Péter NádasEnikő BollobásTwo Hungarian authors, Sándor Márai and Péter Nádas, seem to have one thing in common: their attraction to triangular relationships. Written between 1935 and 1942 and portraying human relations in pre-World War II Hungary, Márai’s two novels and one drama all turn on a very specific triangular structure between two close friends and the woman whom they both love(d). Now they conduct a painful tête-à-tête to decide on the final ownership (or simply fate) of the woman. Written in 1979 and portraying human relations in communist Hungary, Nádas’s play has only two actors on stage, a woman of aristocratic descent and a young man, the son of a high-ranking communist official, the woman’s long dead lover. This exchange between the two characters opens into an encounter of three, where the woman and the young man each use the other as a mediator to reach the third, the lover/father. Bollobás argues that the triangles displayed by the two authors represent two distinct types: the former is informed by fixed, hierarchical, subject-object power relations, while the latter by fluid, non-hierarchical, subject-subject relations.https://ahea.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/ahea/article/view/321Sándor Márai, Péter Nádas, triangles of desire, patriarchal triangles, intersubjective triangles
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Enikő Bollobás
spellingShingle Enikő Bollobás
Versions of Triangular Desire in Hungarian Literature: Reading Sándor Márai and Péter Nádas
Hungarian Cultural Studies
Sándor Márai, Péter Nádas, triangles of desire, patriarchal triangles, intersubjective triangles
author_facet Enikő Bollobás
author_sort Enikő Bollobás
title Versions of Triangular Desire in Hungarian Literature: Reading Sándor Márai and Péter Nádas
title_short Versions of Triangular Desire in Hungarian Literature: Reading Sándor Márai and Péter Nádas
title_full Versions of Triangular Desire in Hungarian Literature: Reading Sándor Márai and Péter Nádas
title_fullStr Versions of Triangular Desire in Hungarian Literature: Reading Sándor Márai and Péter Nádas
title_full_unstemmed Versions of Triangular Desire in Hungarian Literature: Reading Sándor Márai and Péter Nádas
title_sort versions of triangular desire in hungarian literature: reading sándor márai and péter nádas
publisher University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
series Hungarian Cultural Studies
issn 2471-965X
publishDate 2018-08-01
description Two Hungarian authors, Sándor Márai and Péter Nádas, seem to have one thing in common: their attraction to triangular relationships. Written between 1935 and 1942 and portraying human relations in pre-World War II Hungary, Márai’s two novels and one drama all turn on a very specific triangular structure between two close friends and the woman whom they both love(d). Now they conduct a painful tête-à-tête to decide on the final ownership (or simply fate) of the woman. Written in 1979 and portraying human relations in communist Hungary, Nádas’s play has only two actors on stage, a woman of aristocratic descent and a young man, the son of a high-ranking communist official, the woman’s long dead lover. This exchange between the two characters opens into an encounter of three, where the woman and the young man each use the other as a mediator to reach the third, the lover/father. Bollobás argues that the triangles displayed by the two authors represent two distinct types: the former is informed by fixed, hierarchical, subject-object power relations, while the latter by fluid, non-hierarchical, subject-subject relations.
topic Sándor Márai, Péter Nádas, triangles of desire, patriarchal triangles, intersubjective triangles
url https://ahea.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/ahea/article/view/321
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