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especially the development of Hungarian nationalism and its relation to Oriental Studies and Hungarian Studies. In Hungary, only those parts of Oriental Studies were supported which served vested interests within Hungarian Studies. The new Hungarian “national

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Framed by Béla Bartók’s criticism of Ferenc Erkel’s nationally inappropriate style in his polemic “On Hungarian Music,” this article examines, on the one hand, the overlap between the conventions of the bel canto Italian mad scene and the structure of verbunkos in Act 3, scene 1 of Erkel’s Bánk bán, and, on the other, the dramaturgical and national significance of Erkel’s particular mixture of such international and Hungarian traditions. In particular, I consider the seeming incongruence between the typically celebratory mood of the csárdás and its function as the cabaletta of Melinda’s mad scene as an expression of Hungarian national preoccupation with victimhood (propagated by such foundational national texts as Mihály Vörösmarty’s 1836 Szózat, which has served as Hungary’s “second national anthem”). Melinda’s mad scene takes place on the banks of the Tisza River on the Great Hungarian Plain, a location of central importance to Hungarian national identity. This environment, which Erkel and his librettist invented for the mad scene, reinforces Melinda’s tragic role as a symbol of the nation. With eye and ear attuned to Hungarian traditions on several different levels, a close reading of this scene demonstrates that even when Erkel works within well-worn traditions of the international opera stage, he does so in a manner specifically suited to the spirit of nineteenth-century Hungarian nationalism.

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an integral part of emerging Hungarian nationalism. The collection and research of folklore took off on a large scale during this time when folk culture was considered the very embodiment of the nature and character of a nation. Consequently, many

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latter for not being critical enough towards Hungarian nationalism. The debate ended with the merging of the two journals in 1932 into a new nationalist periodical, the Burgenländische Heimatblätter . This „merging” in fact signaled something like the

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Hungarian Nationalism, which focused on the idea known as pan-Turanism at the turn of the century, was among the factors that contributed to the strengthening of relations with Turkey. This Hungaro-Turkic relationship (a supposed blood relation and the idea

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