英雄的孩子:拯救大战孤儿

IF 0.3 3区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY Journal of Modern European History Pub Date : 2021-03-24 DOI:10.1177/1611894421992688
Friederike Kind-Kovács
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引用次数: 3

摘要

第一次世界大战及其后果产生了一个特别脆弱的受害儿童群体:战争孤儿。这一群体包括父亲阵亡、失踪或尚未回家的儿童。欧洲的大多数战争和战后社会都目睹了这些儿童受害者的大量存在,并以各种方式对他们进行救援,确保他们未来的生存。本文探讨了奥匈帝国的匈牙利部分,以及后来的后帝国匈牙利国家,如何投资为匈牙利战争孤儿提供照顾和救济。与其他受害儿童群体不同的是,他们的父母被指责忽视了父母的职责,作为“战争英雄”的后代,战争孤儿从公众对他们父亲为战争努力和匈牙利民族所做牺牲的赞赏中获利。当代匈牙利媒体的公共话语让我们得以一窥这些受害儿童在公众面前的新形象,以及对照顾他们的社会义务的新认识。这篇文章探讨了第一次世界大战及其后果,作为20世纪政治变革的一个生动例子,展示了战争孤儿是如何被带到战争和战后破坏的基本概念的化身,同时也捕捉到了战后复苏的愿景。它进一步探讨了匈牙利战争孤儿的福利话语和救济实践是如何融入当代性别规范、正确的基督教道德观念和民族主义的。在此基础上,文章评估了匈牙利战争孤儿案件不仅反映了第一次世界大战后儿童福利的职业化,而且反映了儿童福利的根本转变。
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The heroes’ children: Rescuing the Great War’s orphans
World War I and its aftermath produced a particularly vulnerable group of child victims: war orphans. This group included children whose fathers had fallen in battle, who had disappeared, or who had not (yet) returned home. Most of Europe’s war and postwar societies witnessed the massive presence of these child victims, and responded in various ways to rescue them and secure their future survival. This article offers an exploration of the ways in which the Hungarian part of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy, and then later the post-imperial Hungarian state, became invested in providing care and relief to Hungarian war orphans. In contrast to other groups of child victims, whose parents were blamed for neglecting their parental duties, war orphans as the offspring of ‘war heroes’ profited from the public appreciation of their fathers’ sacrifice for the war effort and the Hungarian nation. The public discourse in the contemporary Hungarian media offers a glimpse into the emergence of a new public visibility of these child victims and of a new recognition of the societal obligation to care for them. Exploring World War I and its aftermath as a telling example of political transformation in the 20th century, the article showcases how war orphans were taken to personify essential notions of war- and postwar destruction, while also capturing visions of postwar recovery. It furthermore examines how welfare discourses and relief practices for Hungary’s war orphans were embedded in contemporary gender norms, notions of proper Christian morality and ethnic nationalism. On this basis, the article assesses the ways in which the case of Hungary’s war orphans not only mirrors the professionalization but also the fundamental transformation of child welfare in the aftermath of World War I.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
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发文量
42
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