Hungarian Studies Newsletter, 1977 (5. évfolyam, 13-15. szám)

1977 / 13. szám

HUNGARIAN REFERENCE SHELF MASTER’S THESES RELATED TO HUNGARY AND HUNGARIANS ACCEPTED IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA Compiled by Joseph Széplaki (U. of Minnesota) Editor’s note: The listing below is but part of a large number of theses written on Hungarian-related subjects at Canadian and United States institutions. As with other Hungarian-related source material, master's theses are scattered and unregistered, difficult to find. Szeplaki’s effort is a beginning toward establishing a com­prehensive listing of all Hungarian-relevant doctoral dissertations and master’s these written in English. We would welcome con­tributions toward this goal, and gratefully acknowledge the contribu­tion of András Boros-Kazai, who supplied a list of theses accepted by Indiana U. BCM. AMES, Evan Brown. “Hungarian-Slovak Relations to Trianon; The Feasibility of Revision.” Indiana U., 1966. BALES, Mariá. "The RoleoftheNon-MagyarMinoritiesinthe Hungarian Revolution of 1848-49.” San Jose State Coll., 1966. / BALOGH, Eva S. "The Nationality Policy of the Hungarian Soviet Republic of 1919.” Yale U., 1968. BALPATAKY, Susanne Marie. “Stephen Széchényi and His Socio-Economic and Political Ideas.” U. of Toronto, 1972. BEKE, Gizelle Terese. “Empörer Joseph ILTragic Hero of Two Hungarian Historical Dramas." Indiana U., 1970. BOROS, Alexander. “Their New World, a Comparative Study of the Assimilation Patterns of Four Waves of Hungarian Immigration.” Kent State U., 1959. BOROS-KAZAI, András. “Literary Trends in Hungary During the Hunyadi Era (1440-1490)”. Indiana U., 1975. BOROS-KAZAI, Mary Borsos. “Western Travelers in Hungary During the Sixteenth Century.” Indiana U., 1975. CARLSON, Charles Frederic. “Native Hungarian Words of Ob-Ugric and Older Origin.” Indiana U., 1967. CSICSERY-RONAY, István. “A Critical Study of Hungarian in Some Basic Reference Tools with a Historical and Cultural Chronology.” Catholic U., 1957. DAVIS, Mark Logan. “An Investigation of the Pamphlet Entitled The Demands of the Malecontents..Indiana U., 1974. DEME, László. “The Decline of Hungary 1490-1526.” Colum­bia U., 1959. DOMONKOS, László. “The Impact of Foreign Scholars on Hungary during the Reign of Matthias Corvinus, 1458-1490.” U. of Notre Dame, 1960. DOMONKOS, László. “The Sigismundian Foundation of the U. of Óbuda - 1395.” U. of Notre Dame, 1963. ENDREY, Anthony. “Sons of Nimrod: The Origin of Hungarians.” Melbourne U. FELEDY, Jules. “The Hungarian Labour Movement and Be'la Kun’s Regime in the European Setting.” McGill U., 1963. HEYA-KISS, Maria. Hungarian Classical Literature in the National Union Catalog; A Bibliographical Survey.” Catholic U., 1953. HERMANCE, Edwin Hugh. “Socialist Realism; Theory and Practice. Lukács, Brecht, and Malraux.” Indiana U.,1966. HIDAS, Pe'ter Iván. “The Russian Intervention in Hungary in 1849.” McGill U., 1967. HORN, Herbert Alvin. “Idiomatic Writing of the Piano Music of Bela Bartók.” U. of Southern California, 1963. HOSH, Robert S. "Arpádhon, Louisiana: An Example of Hungarian Immigrant Acculturation.” Columbia U., 1971. HRIVNYAK, John M. “Birmingham: Toledo’s Hungarian Community.” U. of Toledo (Ohio), 1975. IPACS, Isabella. “Romanticism in the Hungarian Historical Painting of the Nineteenth Century.” Ohio U., 1973. KAUTZ, Edwin. “The Hungarian Baptist Movement in the United States.” U. of Pittsburgh, 1946. KAZAR, Lajos. “The Idea of Ability as Expressed in Hungarian and English: A Contrastive Study.” Indiana U., 1972. KENT, Mary Benen Sister. “A Study of Textures and Struc­tural Principles in the Unaccompanied Choral Works of Kodály.” Indiana U., 1967. / KOMLOS, John. “Louis Kossuth in America.” U. of Northeastern Illinois, 1972. KOVÁCS, Ilona. “The Hungarians in the United States: An Annotated Bibliography.” Kent State U., 1975. MOLNÁR, Piroska. “Baron József Eötvös and the Problem of Hungary’s Imperial Connections.” Columbia U., 1965. PRIMES, Agnes. “Hungarians in New York.” Columbia U., 1940. REYNARD, Mikki (Mary Frederic Fox). “The English Equivalent of Hungarian mar.” Indiana U., 1968. RICE, Lester A. “Some Rules of Hungarian Vocalization.” Indiana U., 1965. ROMAN, Eric. “Roots and Results of the Hungarian Revolu- • tion of 1956.” New York U., 1959. ROSS, Ronald David. “The Formal and Structural Role of Thirds in the Bartók String Quartets.” Indiana U., 1968. RUSSELL, Michel A. “Soviet-Hungarian Relations, 1953-1956; the Soviet View.” Columbia U., 1956. SPIRA, Thomas. “The German Minority School Problem in Hungary, 1918-1938.” McGill U., 1965. SZENTMIKLOSY, Eles Géza. "Hungarians in Cleveland.” John Carroll U., 1972. TABORSZKY, Otto. “The Hungarian Press in America.” Catholic U„ 1955. TÖRÖK, István. "Mass Migration in the Carpathian Basin; Concise Rational History of the Immigration and Investiga­tion of Reasons for the Exodus from Hungary Tracing the Recent Waves, with Focus on American Immigration.” State U. of New York, 1970. TROMBLEY, Dorothy Lynne. “A Study of Cadences in Four String Quartets by Bela Bartók.” Ohio U., 1962. VITÉZ, Francis. "A Bibliographical Survey of the Hungarian Reformed Literature in the United States.” Columbia U., 1965. WAISENSEL, Lawrence E. “U.S. Mission to Hungary, 1849.” Catholic U„ 1948. / WEISS, Eva. “The Revolution of 1848 in Austria-Hungary.” McGill U., 1966. YARWOOD, William A. “An Analysis of A tardi helyzet, The Situation in Tard." Indiana U., 1966. (Continued on page 11) 10 NO. 13, 1977 HUNGARIAN STUDIES NEWSLETTER

Next

/
Oldalképek
Tartalom