Social composition and everyday life of Cominform emigrants in Hungary (1948-1980)

As a direct but unexpected consequence of the outbreak of the Soviet–Yugoslav conflict, so-called Cominformist or ibeovci communities were established in the Soviet Union and in its Eastern European satellite states. Their community was organized in Hungary, too, at the turn of 1948–1949. The ibeovc...

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Main Author: Péter Vukman
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Institut za Savremenu Istoriju 2018-02-01
Series:Istorija 20. Veka
Subjects:
Online Access:http://istorija20veka.rs/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/2018_1_07_vuk_133-146.pdf
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spelling doaj-e642c75afeb947ef9ae1befef34a87232020-11-25T00:53:18ZdeuInstitut za Savremenu Istoriju Istorija 20. Veka0352-31602560-36472018-02-01361/201813314610.29362/ist20veka.2018.1.vuk.133-146Social composition and everyday life of Cominform emigrants in Hungary (1948-1980)Péter Vukman0Institute of History, University of Szeged, Szeged, HungaryAs a direct but unexpected consequence of the outbreak of the Soviet–Yugoslav conflict, so-called Cominformist or ibeovci communities were established in the Soviet Union and in its Eastern European satellite states. Their community was organized in Hungary, too, at the turn of 1948–1949. The ibeovci emigrants in Hungary formed a rather small and closed community which was subject to many internal conflicts, personal rivalries, real and imagined grievances. Most of the emigrants arrived to Hungary from the neighbouring Yugoslav republics. Ethnically, the majority of them were Serbs, and socially, they originated from lower social strata. The majority of them originated from the countryside or were first generational town dwellers. The emigrants were also prone to serious hardship in their everyday lives, material and financial conditions, and accommodation. These problems were gradually solved by the mid-1950s. Still, in some aspects, the emigrants lived on at least the same level, or even above the level, of the everyday Hungarians. Stalin’s death and the slow and time-consuming process of normalization between the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia, and consequent improvement of relations between Yugoslavia and Hungary resulted in the dissolution of the emigrants’ community in Hungary in 1954. The emigrants became marginalized and they lost justification for their further political activities, which raised many personal dilemmas. Most of the emigrants remained in Hungary and became apolitical, but a small fraction remained politically active even in the 1960s and 1970s.http://istorija20veka.rs/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/2018_1_07_vuk_133-146.pdfSoviet–Yugoslav conflictYugoslav–Hungarian relationshipsibeovci emigrantsCominformist emigrants
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Péter Vukman
spellingShingle Péter Vukman
Social composition and everyday life of Cominform emigrants in Hungary (1948-1980)
Istorija 20. Veka
Soviet–Yugoslav conflict
Yugoslav–Hungarian relationships
ibeovci emigrants
Cominformist emigrants
author_facet Péter Vukman
author_sort Péter Vukman
title Social composition and everyday life of Cominform emigrants in Hungary (1948-1980)
title_short Social composition and everyday life of Cominform emigrants in Hungary (1948-1980)
title_full Social composition and everyday life of Cominform emigrants in Hungary (1948-1980)
title_fullStr Social composition and everyday life of Cominform emigrants in Hungary (1948-1980)
title_full_unstemmed Social composition and everyday life of Cominform emigrants in Hungary (1948-1980)
title_sort social composition and everyday life of cominform emigrants in hungary (1948-1980)
publisher Institut za Savremenu Istoriju
series Istorija 20. Veka
issn 0352-3160
2560-3647
publishDate 2018-02-01
description As a direct but unexpected consequence of the outbreak of the Soviet–Yugoslav conflict, so-called Cominformist or ibeovci communities were established in the Soviet Union and in its Eastern European satellite states. Their community was organized in Hungary, too, at the turn of 1948–1949. The ibeovci emigrants in Hungary formed a rather small and closed community which was subject to many internal conflicts, personal rivalries, real and imagined grievances. Most of the emigrants arrived to Hungary from the neighbouring Yugoslav republics. Ethnically, the majority of them were Serbs, and socially, they originated from lower social strata. The majority of them originated from the countryside or were first generational town dwellers. The emigrants were also prone to serious hardship in their everyday lives, material and financial conditions, and accommodation. These problems were gradually solved by the mid-1950s. Still, in some aspects, the emigrants lived on at least the same level, or even above the level, of the everyday Hungarians. Stalin’s death and the slow and time-consuming process of normalization between the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia, and consequent improvement of relations between Yugoslavia and Hungary resulted in the dissolution of the emigrants’ community in Hungary in 1954. The emigrants became marginalized and they lost justification for their further political activities, which raised many personal dilemmas. Most of the emigrants remained in Hungary and became apolitical, but a small fraction remained politically active even in the 1960s and 1970s.
topic Soviet–Yugoslav conflict
Yugoslav–Hungarian relationships
ibeovci emigrants
Cominformist emigrants
url http://istorija20veka.rs/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/2018_1_07_vuk_133-146.pdf
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