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Colours and years / Margit Kaffka ; English translation by George F. Cushing ; introduction by Charlotte Franklin

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Budapest : Corvina Books, 1999Description: 242 pagesContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9631344630
Uniform titles:
  • Színek és évek. English
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 894.51133
Summary: "Colours and Years, which came out in 1912, explores the complexities facing different generations of these new women and catapulted her to success. Based on the technique of the talking head, it reveals not only the character of the writer herself, her background and history, with special emphasis on her relationship to her mother, but life as it was lived just before the First World War in the small Hungarian town of Nagykároly. The poet Endre Ady's words stand as fitting tribute to her even today: 'Let us rejoice in Margit Kaffka because she proves the triumph of Hungarian feminism... She is a strong person, an artist with an assured future: no criticism can hinder her true destiny, the path marked as her own."--Cover
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Barcode
Book Book Main Library Reference Section Women’s Collection WC 894.51133 K11c 1999 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 132433d

"Colours and Years, which came out in 1912, explores the complexities facing different generations of these new women and catapulted her to success. Based on the technique of the talking head, it reveals not only the character of the writer herself, her background and history, with special emphasis on her relationship to her mother, but life as it was lived just before the First World War in the small Hungarian town of Nagykároly. The poet Endre Ady's words stand as fitting tribute to her even today: 'Let us rejoice in Margit Kaffka because she proves the triumph of Hungarian feminism... She is a strong person, an artist with an assured future: no criticism can hinder her true destiny, the path marked as her own."--Cover

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