Contributors


Eszter Babarczy , a graduate in art history and philosophy is doing postgraduate research in political philosophy and the history of ideas. Currently she is Visiting Fellow at the Institut für die Wissenschaften von Menschen in Vienna where she is translating The Philosophical Disenfranchisement of Art by A.C. Danto into Hungarian.

Zsolt Bánhegyi is the Systems Librarian of the Library of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.

  Vilmos Erõs is Assistant Professor of History at the Kossuth Lajos University in Debrecen. His main field of research is the historiography of the interwar period in Hungary.

Gábor Gyáni is Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of History of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. His publications in English include Women as Domestic Servants: the case of Budapest 1980-90 (1989) and the Budapest chapter in M.J. Daunton (ed.), Housing the Workers 1950-1914: a comparative perspective (1990).

Michael Heim is Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures at the University of California, Los Angeles. He has translated works by a number of authors including Péter Esterházy, Bohumil Hrabal, Danilo Kisù, György Konrád, Milan Kundera and Dubravka Ugresùic.´.

András Nagy has written on Kierkegaard and Alma Mahler and many other subjects plays as well as three novels and two volumes of essays.

Henning Ritter is Editor of the Geisteswissenschaften column of the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. He is editor of a two-volume collection of Rousseau's writings and author of a collection of essays, Der lange Schatten, published by Insel Verlag in 1992.

Kornél Steiger holds the chair of Metaphysics at the Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest. His publications include a book-length study on the Sophists, readers on the philosophy of Antiquity as well as translations of the works of Aristotle, Parmenides, Empedocles and Theophrastus.

Pál S. Varga is Associate Professor of Literature at the Kossuth Lajos University in Debrecen. His publications include a book on Hungarian poetry in the second half of the nineteenth century and a book-length study on The Tragedy of Man by Imre Madách.


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