87. szám // 2022. Zsidó felemelkedés vagy térnyerés?

Tanulmányok

Megjelent: 2022.08.

Turbucz Péter

Identity, Self-Representation, Scholarship: The Careers of Bernát Alexander and Henrik Marczali in Light of Their Works in Budapesti Hirlap

Abstract

Examining the rise of neolog Jewish intellectuals of the post-1867 period, Bernát Alexander (1850–1927) and Henrik Marczali (1856–1940) are typically assessed on the basis of their role in scholarship and university life, as well as their academic achievements and status. They are among the few dozen Jew- ish intellectuals who have been internationally recognized as representatives of modern secularized scientific thought: living examples of the success of assimi- lation. They also belonged to the same generation, sharing not only the same erudition acquired at foreign universities, but also jobs, similar career paths, as well as religious beliefs and identity. Based on all these, posterity’s judgment of progress, successes, and failures, both theirs and their generation’s, has become almost like topoi. In contrast, the present study examines the careers of Alexan- der and Marczali in the light of their work as journalists at Budapesti Hirlap. The study examines how the two scholars’ decades-long friendship with editor-in- chief Jenő Rákosi (1842–1929) and their journalistic work at the paper influ- enced their Hungarian–Jewish identity, self-representation, and academic work. We can also gain insights into their thinking about current affairs, and social and cultural initiatives. Analyzing their views in more detail than previous bio- graphical studies reveals how their press publications related to their academic work, and whether they helped to promote the social acceptance of Jews in gene- ral. The study also sheds light on how the editorial staff of the Budapesti Hir- lap helped Alexander and Marczali shape their own careers, and to what extent their nationalistic understanding of their role was embraced by a paper that was seen as one of the most important media of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy’s agenda of Hungarianization.