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Founded in 1936 by Count István Bethlen (Prime Minister of Hungary 1921–31) The Hungarian Quarterly soon made a name for itself, thanks to contributions from the best Hungarian authors, English and American journalists and politicians who sympathised with post-Trianon Hungary. During the closing stage of the Second World War, fascists killed its editor and the journal ceased publication. The Kádár regime, wishing to improve its image, revived it in 1960 as The New Hungarian Quarterly. The journal reverted to its original name in 1993 after Hungary's return to democracy. Since then The Hungarian Quarterly has been politically neutral seeking to inform and provoke on a wide range of subjects – historians, economists, literary scholars, musicians and film- and theatre-goers will regularly find something stimulating. The journal has earned a peerless reputation for its translations of Hungarian fiction and poetry. Every issue includes poems translated by English and American poets.
Zsófia Zachár, Editor
Miklós Vajda, Editor Emeritus
Rudolf Fischer & Peter Doherty, Language Editors
Ágnes Orzóy, Assistant Editor
Kati Könczöl, Editorial Secretary
Society of Hungarina Quarterly
since 1995, freely available