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Hungarian Revolution of 1956
Hungarian Revolution of 1956
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forthcoming
Product details
- ISBN 9780198815907
- Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
- Publication Date: 03 Sep 2026
- Publisher: Oxford University Press
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
On 23 October 1956, Hungarian students staged a peaceful demonstration in Budapest, trying to publicize their specific demands for change. By nighttime, frustrated by hardline speeches and lack of response by the leadership, they toppled Stalin's bronze monument. Hours later, Soviet tanks rolled in. The first Soviet military intervention had begun.
The Hungarian Revolution of 1956 was not an isolated revolt but a transnational rupture--one of the first major fissures in the Soviet bloc that reshaped dissent and repression across Eastern Europe for decades. But how did the youth across the communist bloc actually respond? The popular reactions to Hungary 1956 were far from uniform in the Soviet Union and people's democracies. Many youth in communist organizations, like the Komsomol, applauded the Soviet military invasion as 'restoring order'. Some blamed Nikita Khrushchev, claiming that if Joseph Stalin had lived, the Hungarian uprising of 1956 could have been prevented. Others were indifferent or disapproved in silence. Sensitive youth contributed to debates, but then after sharp rebukes, retreated into shame-based self-censoring. Still other independent-thinking youth, probably a minority, spread leaflets or essays demanding change. Nationalists adopted new legalist strategies. Regimes responded with both crackdowns and concessions.
Drawing on memoirs and documents from secret police and Communist Party archives, The Hungarian Revolution of 1956: Tremors in the Soviet Bloc offers the first single-authored, archive-based comparative study of elite and popular reactions across East Germany, Austria, Romania, Soviet Ukraine, and Soviet Russia, both Moscow and Leningrad, as well as the Urals and Siberian regions. Moving beyond Cold War binaries and single-country case studies, this book examines both similarities and differences in how citizens and regimes reacted to the Hungarian revolt of 1956 and the Soviet military intervention. The lessons of 1956 are still relevant in today's struggles against oppressive regimes.
Johanna Granville, a historian of political upheaval in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, was a Campbell National Fellow at Stanford's Hoover Institution and has received Fulbright, IREX, ACTR, and Woodrow Wilson Center fellowships.
Granville has conducted extensive archival research in communist bloc countries. Author of The First Domino: International Decision Making during the Hungarian Crisis of 1956 (2004) and numerous scholarly articles, she has taught at Harvard, Tufts, Carnegie Mellon, and the U.S. Air War College, as a Fulbright lecturer in Moscow and Debrecen, Hungary, and as the Panitza Visiting Professor, American University of Bulgaria.
Hungarian Revolution of 1956
€116.99
