Contributors


Eszter Babarczy graduated in art history and philosophy at Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest. She is an essayist, translator, and one of the editors of the monthly Beszélõ. Her publicatons include the volume of essays A ház, a kert, az utca (The House, the Garden, the Street, 1996).

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

Natalie Zemon Davis is Henry Charles Lea Professor of History Emeritus, Princeton University and Northrop Frye Visiting Professor of Literary Theory, University of Toronto. Her books include, most recently, Women on the Margins: Three seventeenth-century lives. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1995.

Attila Debreczeni is Associate Professor at the Department of Old Hungarian Literature of Kossuth Lajos University, Debrecen. His publications are on the literature of the Hungarian Enlightenment and the Age of Reform and textology.

Miklós Györffy teaches at the Department of Comparative Literature of Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest. A novelist and script writer, he has translated works by Goethe, Heine, Kafka, Hermann Broch, and Thomas Bernhard.

László Kisbali teaches at the Department of Aesthetics of Janus Pannonius University, Pécs and at the Theoretical Institute of the College of Applied Arts, Budapest.

Ambrus Miskolczy is Head of the Department of Romanian at Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest. He is the author of a number of books on Romanian history and the history of Transylvania as well as General Editor of the series Encyclopaedia Transsylvanica, and the series of yearbooks, Europa-Balcanica-Danubiana-Carpatica.

László Neumann is a Research Fellow at the Research Institute of Labor. His current interest is the impact of privatization on employment and resultant conflicts at the workplace.

Andrei Plesu, an art historian and medievalist, was Minister of Cultural Affairs in Romania in 1990-91. He is now Director of the New Europe College in Bucharest, and Editor of the weekly Dilemma. His publications include two volumes of essays and Minima Moralia (Elements for an Ethics of the Interval, Bucharest, 1988), also translated into French (1990) and German (1992).

Csaba Pléh is Head of the Department of Psychology at the Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest. His main fields of research are history of psychology and psycholinguistics. His books include History of Psychology, forthcoming in 1998 (Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press).

Gábor Sándor, M.D. is a specialist in internal medicine. He is Assistant Professor at the Pharmacological Institue of Semmelweis Medical University and physician to the Central European University, Budapest.

András Török is a Budapest author and lecturer in urban history. Presently he is the President of the National Cultural Fund. His books include biographies of Mark Twain and Oscar Wilde and Budapest: A Critical Guide, republished in a revised edition in 1997 by Corvina Books.

András Wilheim teaches composition at the Liszt Ferenc Academy of Music in Budapest. Currently he is working on a thematic catalog of György Kurtág's compositions and a book on John Cage.


Please feel free to send us your comments.
Take out your subscription now!
 
 
C3 Alapítvány       c3.hu/scripta/