CEU eTD Collection (2024); Szarvas, Marton: Peacetime for "Soldiers of Culture": "Civic cultivation" in Hungary's Houses of Culture since 1990

CEU Electronic Theses and Dissertations, 2024
Author Szarvas, Marton
Title Peacetime for "Soldiers of Culture": "Civic cultivation" in Hungary's Houses of Culture since 1990
Summary This historical ethnography of houses of culture (HoC) in two Hungarian towns interrogates the changing relationship between state and culture in contemporary Hungary. I inquired about what actors formed policies and activities in the house of culture. How and who voiced participation and/or resistance to political and social changes in the place? Why did the function of it change? I examine the processes through which actors (both professionals of culture and citizens) create and reproduce but also contest the state’s symbolic power in and through practices and programs in the house of culture.
Activities organized in HoCs are called civic cultivation (közm 1;velőd&# xe9;s). That is an assemblage of educational activities, typically organized by modern states within different cultural institutions to form citizens and labor through moral education and disseminating knowledge about institutional culture and a modern way of life. I formulate civic cultivation as an activity organized by the integral state. Following Gramsci’s definition of state (political + civil society), it is on the border of and involves participation from both civil and political society. It affects control and coercion by selecting legitimate cultural practices and distinguishing between authentic and inauthentic traditions.
The history of the house of culture is intertwined in the early 20th century with the expansion of Hungarian national sentiments. It also contributed to the fight against illiteracy and the commodification and display of folk culture. For the early socialist state, it was as important that they referred to the staff as soldiers of culture who maintained social cohesion through disseminating socialist culture. During the 1960s, civic cultivation gradually lost its militancy and became a defined field of expertise. Since the transition as an institution, it has been partially abandoned. After the EU accession in 2004, it has been a subject of a series of transformations such as Europeanization or after 2010 centralization. House of culture in towns of the countryside became the site conflict on reproduction of local elites, and the cultural means they utilize.
I inquire through ethnographic research in two towns located in Eastern Hungary how shifts in understanding of houses of culture’s function on the national scale and the transformation of local practices mutually affected each other. The selection of the field sites was based on the fact that in these localities, there is a continuity of programs alongside their differences in conditions of unequal development. The first field, Salgótarján, is situated in north-eastern Hungary, where the early penetration of industrialization resulted in a lively worker culture. The memory of industrial production occupies a central role in the city's identity. The second case is Mezőkövesd, an agrarian town where folk culture was commodified early and became an essential part of modern cultural practices.
Supervisor Kowalski, Alexandra; Naumescu, Vlad
Department Sociology PhD
Full texthttps://www.etd.ceu.edu/2024/szarvas_marton.pdf

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