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Aron Tamasi, the Transylvanian Regionalist (1897- )

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 August 2018

Joseph Remenyi*
Affiliation:
Western Reserve University

Extract

There are writers who take the reader into a strange world as Alice was taken into Wonderland when she stepped through the Looking-Glass. Aron Tamasi,the Transylvanian, is such a writer. He knows the wants of simple folk, he is concerned with their dreams, he is a friend of those who have suffered injustice, and he also knows them when they are in search of happiness. His art is a half-oriental tapestry of pure faith, magic and sorcery; a hint of urbane things, of characteristics which are in line with folklore. In all his stories, novels and plays, he upholds the rights of man. He maintains that “we are born to this globe entitled to find shelter on it.”

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies 1946

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References

Bibliography

In English:

Remenyi, Joseph, Hungarian Literature. Washington, D. C. 1946.Google Scholar
Hankiss, Janos and Juhasz, Geza, Litterature Hongroise, Paris, 1930.Google Scholar
Keresztury, Dezso von, Ungarn, ein Novellenbuch (Hungary, a Book of Short Stories), Breslau, 1937.Google Scholar
Szerb, Antal, Magyar Irodalomtortenet (History of Hungarian Literature), Kolozsvar, Transylvania, 1933, and Budapest, Hungary, 1934.Google Scholar
Aladar Schopflin, , A Magyar Irodalom Tortenete a Huszadik Szazadban (The History of Hungarian Literature in the Twentieth Century), Budapest, Hungary, 1937.Google Scholar