Social Traumas Living with Us

The course fee for 2-week courses - that includes tuition fee, accommodation (student residence halls with shared rooms 2-3/ room), meals (breakfast and lunch), local transport and the cost of the leisure time programs - is 750 EUR. All applicants are required to pay 100 EUR (out of this 750) as registration fee within 10 days of submitting their application. The registration fee is non-refundable.
Credits: 6 EC
Our course offers ECTS points, which may be accepted for credit transfer by the participants' home universities. Those who wish to obtain these credits should inquire about the possible transfer at their home institution prior to their enrollment. The International Strategy Office will send a transcript to those who have fulfilled all the necessary course requirements and request one.
Venue: Lågymånyos Campus, 1117 Budapest, Påzmåny Péter sétåny 1/A, North Building, Faculty Council Room, 0.100C (ground floor)
Opening Ceremony venue: ELTE Faculty of Humanities, (Trefort Campus), 1088 Budapest, MĂșzeum körĂșt 4/A, Building A, Faculty Council Room, ground floor
Application:
For students who do not need a visa to travel to Hungary: /en/social-trauma-bsu2023
For students who need a visa to travel to Hungary: /en/social-trauma-bsu2023-visa
For students applying through DAAD scholarship - available only for students studying in Germany : /en/social-trauma-bsu2023-daad
COURSE DESCRIPTION
A unique opportunity awaits students of ELTE Summer University of 2023 on Social Traumas Living with Us â to learn about the depth and gravity of social traumas, their transgenerational transmission, their social constructions, and to dive into the social and individual consequences of different traumas such as the Holocaust trauma, trauma of social exclusion and marginalization, and the trauma of ongoing warfare in society. The course will explore those social contexts of memory policies in which they are constructed as well as those coping mechanisms which assist the survival on both the social and individual levels.
The lecturers of this course are well acclaimed international and Hungarian researchers and theorists of the social trauma who will provide seminars and discussions on their themes beyond the lectures. The course will enrich participants with common movie experience and theme focused field activities such as visits in the Holocaust Museum, Budapest, House of Terror, Jewish University of Budapest, and arranges a guided âWallenberg Walkâ (visit of the buildings and the neighborhoods where Raoul Wallenberg hid and saved numbers of Jewish families and individuals in the era of Nazi terror and deportation).
Prerequisites for taking the course: No specific requirements
ECT credits: 6 credits
Method of instruction: Participatory workshop activity, interspersed with 90- minute lectures.
Evaluation on basis of
- Demonstrated competency in participatory sessions (50%)
- Focused essay (1500 - 2000 words) on trauma-society-memory politics (due July 30th) (30%)
- Completion of final reflection (20%)
SESSION DESIGN
Two-week course with lectures, movie sessions and thematic focused field visits and field work.
TIME OF SESSION ACTIVITY READINGS FACULTY
WEEK ONE: JULY 17 â 22
MONDAY, JULY 17
OPENING DAY
10:00 â 12:00 ELTE Summer University Opening Ceremony
12:00 â 13:00 LUNCH BREAK
13:00 â 14:00 INTRODUCTION SESSION Prof. Agnes KövĂ©r-Van Til and Prof. ZoltĂĄn Haberman
14:00 â 15:30 LECTURE Trauma research as a social science. What is social trauma and why we must research it? Diving in the diversity of social trauma. ALEXANDER, C. J. (2016) Culture trauma, Morality and solidarity: The social construction of âHolocaustâ and other Mass murders. SZTOMPKA, P. (2000) Cultural Trauma. The other face of social change. ALEXANDER, C. J. (2012) Trauma. A social theory. pp. 6 â 30. HIRSCHBERGER, G. (2018) Collective trauma and the social construction of meaning. Prof. Agnes KövĂ©r-Van Til
15:30 â 16:30 LECTURE Snapshots of an ongoing research: Transgenerational Holocaust trauma in the 2nd and 3rd generations of survivors. Prof. KövĂ©r-Van Til and Prof. Haberman
TUESDAY, JULY 18
HOLOCAUST TRAUMA
9:00 â 10:30 LECTURE There and then⊠Survival stories JULIA VAJDA: Left on Our Own, in: https://www.theverylongview.com/WATH/ Prof. JĂșlia Vajda
10:30 â 12:00 LECTURE Historical and Transgenerational Trauma: An Integrative Model of Trauma Transmission Across Generations SHMOTKIN, D., SHRIRA, A., GOLDBERG, S. C., & PALGI, Y. (2011). Resilience and vulnerability among aging Holocaust survivors and their families: An intergenerational overview. Prof. Vera BĂ©kĂ©s
12:00 â 13:00
LUNCH BREAK
13:00 â 14:30 DISCUSSION/SEMINAR with Vera BĂ©kĂ©s and JĂșlia Vajda Moderated by Prof. KövĂ©r-Van Til
14:30 â 16:00 MOVIE SESSION Fatelessness (2005) â the movie based on the Nobel laureate Imre KertĂ©szâs novel. Moderated by Prof. KövĂ©r-Van Til and Prof. Haberman
WEDNESDAY, JULY 19 MEMORY POLITICS AND WOMEN HOLCAUST SURVIVALS
9:00 â 10:30 LECTURE Memory politics and the social reception of Womenâs Holocaust experience OFER, D. â WEITZMAN, L. (2004) Women in the Holocaust. Theoretical foundations for a gendered analysis of the Holocaust. pp. 9 â 46. RINGELHEIM, J. M. (2020) The unethical and the unspeakable: women and the Holocaust Prof. Agnes Kover-Van Til
10:30 â 12:00 LECTURE Local Traumas, Transcultural and Transmedial (Re)Translations of Memories (Edith Bruck) GĂBOR GYĂNI (2016) Hungarian Memory of the Holocaust in Hungary. ELEONORE LAPPIN-EPPEL: A Missing Voice: Women Survivors of the Strasshof Transports from Hungary to Austria = Prof. TĂmea Jablonczay
12:00 â 13:00
LUNCH BREAK
13:00 â 14:30
LECTURE Memory policies and women Holocaust survivors VASVĂRI, Louise O. (2009) An Introduction and Bibliography of Works of Central European Women's Holocaust Literature in English. RINGELHEIM, J. M. (2020) The unethical and the unspeakable: women and the Holocaust. Prof. Louise O. VasvĂĄri
14:30 â 16:00 DISCUSSION/SEMINAR with Prof. Louise O. VasvĂĄri, Prof. TĂmea Jablonczay Moderated by Prof. KövĂ©r-Van Til
THURSDAY, JULY 20
WOMENâS TRAUMATIC EXPERIENCES
9:00 â 10:30 LECTURE Erzsi Szenes â Witness of Eichmann Trial COLIN DAVIS, HANNA MERETOJA: The Routledge Companion to Literature and Trauma. ANDRĂS KOVĂCS: Communismâs Jewish Question. Jewish Issues in Communist Archives. Prof. TĂmea Jablonczay
10:30 â 12:00 LECTURE Unimpeachable victimhood and media justice DU MONT, JANICE - KAREN-LEE MILLER - TERRI L. MYHR. 2003. âThe Role of âReal Rapeâ and âReal Victimâ Stereotypes in the Police Reporting Practices of Sexually Assaulted Women.â GREER CHRIS â EUGENE MCLAUGHLIN 2012. âMedia Justice: Madeleine McCann, Intermediatization and âTrial by Mediaâin the British Press.â Prof. EnikĆ VirĂĄgh
12:00 â 13:00
LUNCH BREAK
13:00 â 14:30 DISCUSSION/SEMINAR with TĂmea Jablonczay and EnikĆ VirĂĄgh Moderated by Prof. KövĂ©r-Van Til
14:30 â 16:00 MOVIES SESSION The Trial of Adolf Eichmann (2011) â by Robert Young Moderated by Prof. KövĂ©r-Van Til
FRIDAY, JULY 21
SOCIAL TRAUMAS OF LGBTQI PEOPLE
9:00 â 10:30 LECTURE Pink Triangle, the Badge of Shame. New Nazi Rhetoric on LGBTQ Identities HAYNES S. (2020): Why a Children's Book Is Becoming a Symbol of Resistance in Hungaryâs Fight Over LGBT Rights. MĂRZ. W.J (2021): Hungary's new anti-LGBTQ law: The medical profession must speak out about the harm it does to LGBTQ adolescentsâ health. Prof. KrisztiĂĄn Indries
10:30 â 12:00 LECTURE Historical trauma of LGBTIQ people TAKĂCS J. (2022) How to Conserve Kertbenyâs Grave? A Case of Post-Communist Queer Necrophilia. TAKĂCS J (2017) Listing Homosexuals Prof. Judit TakĂĄcs
since the 1920s and under State Socialism in Hungary.
12:00 â 13:00
LUNCH BREAK
13:00 â 14,30 DISCUSSION/ SEMINAR with Dorottya RĂ©dai, head of LABRISZ Lesbian Association and Judit TakĂĄcs GUEST: Dorottya RĂ©dai LABRISZ Lesbian Association Moderated by Prof. Indries
15:00 â 16:00 FIELD VISIT AND FIELD WORK Living library â visiting civil organizations dealing with minorities Facilitated by Prof. Indries
WEEK TWO: JULY 24 â 29
MONDAY, JULY 24
THE TRAUMA OF LIVING WITH DISABILITIES
9:00 â 10:30 Social traumas and their coping mechanisms HABERMAN, Z. (2017) Holocaust Narratives and Social Construction HĂBERMAN, ZoltĂĄn (2020) SubotiÄ, Jelena Yellow Star, Red Star. Prof. ZoltĂĄn HĂĄberman
10:30 â 12:00 Traumas and recoveries Presentation of the voice hearer method by IstvĂĄn Gallai Self-help tools and methods for dealing with trauma by PĂ©ter KĂ©ri HARANGOZĂ, J. â SZITA, B. â BESE, B. â MĂREY, Zs. â GALLAI. I. (2015): Trauma, dissociation, schizophrenia, and the split mind of professionals. Prof. TĂŒnde BulyĂĄki and her peer recovery specialist guests â IstvĂĄn Gallai and PĂ©ter KĂ©ri Who is a Peer Recovery Specialist? A peer recovery specialist (or peer support specialist) is someone who is in recovery from a mental health disorder and wants to use their lived experience to help others reclaim their lives from illness.
12:00 â 13:00
Lunch Break
13:00 â 14:00 DISCUSSION/ SEMINAR with TĂŒnde BulyĂĄki and the peer Moderated by Prof. HĂĄberman
ecovery specialists
14:30 â 16:00 FIELD VISIT AND FIELD WORK Visit at Awakenings Foundation Facilitated by Prof. BulyĂĄki and Prof. HĂĄberman
TUESDAY, JULY 25
GENOCIDE
9:00 â 13:00 LECTURE SzabĂł MiklĂłs: Volatile Tragedy - A Possible Cultural Anthropological Approach to Critical Genocide Research HINTON, Alexander Laban (2012) "Critical Genocide Studies" Prof. MiklĂłs SzabĂł
10:30 â 12:00 DISCUSSION/SEMINAR Discussion with Holocaust survivors and descendants GUESTS: GĂĄbor Hegyesi, Eszter Varcsa, JĂĄnos Boris Moderated by Prof. KövĂ©r-Van Til
12:00 â 13:00
Lunch Break
13:30 â 16:00 FIELD VISIT AND FIELD WORK Budapest Holocaust Museum Facilitated by Prof. ZoltĂĄn HĂĄberman and Prof. KövĂ©r-Van Til
WEDNESDAY, JULY 26
9:00 â 10:30 LECTURE Childrenâs trauma in the childcare system RĂCZ, A. â SIK, D. 2020. To stay or to leave? The phenomenon of running away, as a form of criticism against the child protection system Prof. Dorottya Sik
10:30 â 12:00 LECTURE Orphans of the crisis period Prof. Eszter Gombocz
12:00 â 13:00
Lunch Break
13:00 â 14:30 DISCUSSION/ SEMINAR with Dorottya Sik Moderated by Prof. HĂĄberman
15:00 â 16:30 MOVIE SESSION Sophiesâ Choice (1982) â by Alan J. Pakula Moderated by Prof. HĂĄberman
THURSDAY, JULY 27
9:00 â 10:30 LECTURE Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Fukushima. Collective AKIKO NAONO (2019): The Origins of âHibakushaâ as a Prof. KrisztiĂĄn Indries
Traumas in a Collectivistic Society Scientific and Political Classification of the Survivor. THURLOW SETSUKO (1982) Nuclear War in Human Perspective. A Survivorâs Report.
10:30 â 12:00 LECTURE Fighting the consequences of social trauma JON VAN TIL, âHealing a Divided Society: Essays on Derry/Londonderry, Northern Irelandâ Prof. ZoltĂĄn HĂĄberman and Prof. Jon Van Til
12:00 â 13:00
Lunch Break
13:00 â 14:30 DISCUSSION/ SEMINAR with KrisztiĂĄn Indries and Jon Van Til Moderated by Prof. HĂĄberman
14:30 â 16:00 MOVIE SESSION The Face of Jizo (2004) by Kazuo Kuroki Moderated by Prof. Indries
FRIDAY, JULY 28
9:00 â 10:30 DISCUSSION/ SEMINAR Bystanders â how we see the Holocaust now â Movie and discussion session GUEST: AndrĂĄs SurĂĄnyi film director RichĂĄrd Papp cultural anthropologist Moderated by Prof. KövĂ©r-Van Til
10:30 â 12:00
WRAPPING UP SESSION by Agnes Kövér-Van Til and Zoltån Håberman
12:00 â 13:00
Lunch Break
13:00 â 16:00 FIELD VISIT Wallenberg walk and Jewish Tour of Budapest Facilitated by Prof. ZoltĂĄn HĂĄberman
PERMANENT INSTRUCTORS and LECTURERS
- Dr. habil. AGNES KOVER-VAN TIL, PhD. â ELTE Faculty of Social Sciences (FSS) Institute of Social Studies: lawyer and sociologist, founder, and leader of ELTE Social Traumas Research Group. Fields: social construction of social trauma, feminist approach to social trauma.
- ZOLTĂN HABERMAN, PhD. - ELTE FSS Institute of Social Studies, founder of Social Traumas Research Group; Chair, Department of Social Science and Social Work at the Jewish Theological Seminary-University of Jewish Studies, Budapest. Fields: social ethics, Jewish studies, Jewish social history, holocaust, trauma, anti-discriminatory social work.
- KRISZTIĂN INDRIES, Ph.D. - clinical psychologist, psychoanalyst, ELTE FSS Institute of Social Studies, founder of Social Traumas Research Group. Fields: PTSD, individual and collective processes of healing trauma.
LECTURERS
- BĂKĂS, VERA - Assistant Professor, Clinical Psychologist, Co-Director, Psychodynamic Program Clinical Psychology Doctoral Program, Yeshiva University, Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology, Canada, clinical psychologist and researcher. Field: trauma and the psychotherapy process, transgenerational transmission of trauma.
- BULYĂKI, TĂNDE â Associate Professor, ELTE FSS Department of Social Work. Field: Social rights of citizens living with mental disabilities.
- JABLONCZAY, TĂMEA â Milton Friedman University, Department of Media and Communication, Associate Professor. Field: Holocaust Memory, Female Holocaust Memory, Transcultural Literary and Memory Studies, Gender Studies.
- SIK, DOROTTYA â Assistant Professor, ELTE FSS Department of Social Work. Field: Child protection and family care.
- SZABĂ, MIKLĂS â Assistant Professor, ELTE FSS Institute of Social Relations, Department of Cultural Anthropology, Program Director of Ethnic and Minority Policy MA. Field: genocide studies, political anthropology.
- TAKĂCS, JUDIT â Research professor at the Institute of Sociology of the Research Center for Social Sciences (Budapest), one of the vice-chairpersons of the Sociological Scientific Committee of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
- VAJDA, JĂLIA â Senior Research Fellow, ELTE FSS â Field: Holocaust memories and narratives.
- VASVĂRI, LOUISE O. â Professor Emerita of Comparative Literature and Linguistics at Stony Brook University. She teaches at New York University and is also Affiliated Professor at the University of Szeged and Founding Editor-in-Chief, Hungarian Cultural Studies. Field: gender theory within a broader framework of comparative cultural studies.
- VIRĂGH, ENIKĆ â Research Fellow, ELTE Faculty of Psychology and Pedagogy. Field: Public discourse analysis, Victims of sexual violence.
BASIC READING FOR THE COURSE
· ALEXANDER, J. C. (2016) Culture trauma, Morality and solidarity: The social construction of âHolocaustâ and other Mass murders. Thesis Eleven, 132(1) 3â16.
· SZTOMPKA, P. (2000) Cultural Trauma. The other face of social change. European Journal of Social Theory 3(4) 449 - 466.
· EYERMAN, R. (2003) Cultural trauma and Collective Identity. Ed. Jeffery C. Alexander. New York: Cambridge UP
· NEAL, A.G. (1998) National Trauma and Collective Memory. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe.
· QUIROS, L. â BERGER, R. (2015) Responding to the Sociopolitical Complexity of Trauma: An Integration of Theory and Practice. Journal of Loss and Trauma, 20:149â159.
· SCHIVELBUSCH, W. (2003). The culture of defeat: On national trauma, mourning and recovery. New York: Henry Holt, Metropolitan Books.
· SOTERO, M. M. (2006). A conceptual model of historical trauma: implications for public health practice and research. Journal of Health Disparities Research and Practice, 1 (1), 93-108.
SPECIAL READINGS FOR THE LECTURE THEMES
Required readings are bolded.
1. Louise O. VasvĂĄriâs recommended readings:
VASVĂRI, Louise O. & Steven Tötösy de Zepetnek. Imre KertĂ©sz and Holocaust Literature. West Lafayette: Purdue UP, 2005.
VASVĂRI, Louise O. & Steven Tötösy de Zepetnek. Comparative Central European Holocaust Studies. West Lafayette: Purdue UP, 2009.
VASVĂRI, Louise O. "An Introduction and Bibliography of Works of Central European Women's
Holocaust Literature in English." In CLCWeb 11.1(2009): 173-200. _https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/clcweb/vol11/iss1/10/
VASVĂRI, Louise O. âIntroduction to Life Writing and the Trauma of Warâ CLCWeb 17.3(2015) http://dx.doi.org/10.7771/1481-4374.2915
VASVĂRI, Louise O. âIdentity and Intergenerational Remembrance Through Traumatic Culinary Nostalgia: Three Generations of Hungarians of Jewish Origin.â Hungarian Cultural Studies 11 (2018): 57-77 https://ahea.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/ahea/article/view/322/630
VASVĂRI, Louise O. âConstructing Narrative Identities in the Holocaust Memories/Memoirs of Three Hungarian Womenâ Hungarian Cultural Studies13 (2020) http://ahea.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/ahea/article/view/389
2. Vera BĂ©kĂ©sâs required reading:
SHMOTKIN, D., Shrira, A., Goldberg, S. C., & Palgi, Y. (2011). Resilience and vulnerability among aging Holocaust survivors and their families: An intergenerational overview. Journal of Intergenerational Relationships, 9(1), 7-21.
3. TĂmea Jablonczayâs recommended readings:
AndrĂĄs KOVĂCS: Communismâs Jewish Question. Jewish Issues in Communist Archives. De Gruyter, Oldenburg, 2017, Introduction, 1-14. The Eichmann-affair, 77-83.
GĂĄbor GYĂNI: Hungarian Memory of the Holocaust in Hungary. In: Randolph L. Braham, AndrĂĄs KovĂĄcs (Eds): The Holocaust in Hungary Seventy Years Later, 2016, 215-230.
Eleonore LAPPIN-EPPEL: A Missing Voice: Women Survivors of the Strasshof Transports from Hungary to Austria = Andrea PETĂ, Louise HECHT, Karolina KRASUSKA: Women and the Holocaust: New Perspectives and Challenges. Warsaw: Instytut BadĂĄn Literackich PAN, 2015. 79-98.
Meg JENSEN: Testimony; Sharon Marquart: Gender. In: Colin Davis, Hanna Meretoja: The Routledge Companion to Literature and Trauma. Routledge, London-New York, 2020. 66-78, 162-172.
4. Agnes Kover-Van Tilâs recommended readings:
ALEXANDER, J. C. (2016) Culture trauma, Morality and solidarity: The social construction of âHolocaustâ and other Mass murders. Thesis Eleven, 132(1) 3â16.
SZTOMPKA, P. (2000) Cultural Trauma. The other face of social change. European Journal of Social Theory 3(4) 449 - 466.
ALEXANDER, C. J. (2012) Trauma. A social theory. Cambridge: Polity Press. pp. 6 â 30.
HIRSCHBERGER, G. (2018) Collective trauma and the social construction of meaning. Frontiers in Psychology, 9: 1441.
OFER, D. â WEITZMAN, L. (2004) Women in the Holocaust. Theoretical foundations for a gendered analysis of the Holocaust. Centro de Investigaciones Interdisciplinarias en Ciencias y Humanidades, UNAM, Mexico. pp. 9 â 46.
RINGELHEIM, J. M. (2020) The unethical and the unspeakable: women and the Holocaust. The Posen Library of Jewish culture and civilization; Volume 10: Late twentieth century. pp. 755-756. Available online:
5. ZoltĂĄn HĂĄbermanâs recommended readings:
HABERMAN, Z. (2017) Holocaust Narratives and Social Construction In SZECSI, Jozsef (ed.) Christian-Jewish Theological Yearbook. 2017. Christian âJewish Society, Budapest pp. 60-65 ISSN 1785-9581
HĂĄberman, ZoltĂĄn (2020) SubotiÄ, Jelena Yellow Star, Red Star. Ithaca INTERSECTIONS: EAST EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIETY AND POLITICS 6: 1 pp. 164-169. Available online: https://m2.mtmt.hu/gui2/?mode=browse¶ms=publication;31636646
6. Krisztian Indriesâs recommended readings:
HAYNES S. (2020): Why a Children's Book Is Becoming a Symbol of Resistance in Hungaryâs Fight Over LGBT Rights: Updated October 8. 2020 9:28 AM EDT Available online: https://time.com/5897312/hungary-book-lgbt-rights/
MĂRZ. W.J (2021): Hungary's new anti-LGBTQ law: The medical profession must speak out about the harm it does to LGBTQ adolescentsâ health. The Lancet Regional Health â Europe, Volume 8, September 2021, Available online: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666776221001769?via%3Dihub
AKIKO NAONO (2019): The Origins of âHibakushaâ as a Scientific and Political Classification of the Survivor, Japanese Studies, DOI: 10.1080/10371397.2019.1654854
THURLOW SETSUKO (1982): Nuclear War in Human Perspective. A Survivorâs Report, Amer. J. Orthopsychiat. 52(4), October 1982, pp.638-645
7. MiklĂłs SzabĂłâs required readings:
HINTON, Alexander Laban (2012) "Critical Genocide Studies," Genocide Studies and Prevention: An International Journal: Vol. 7: Iss. 1: Article 3.
8. TĂŒnde BulyĂĄkiâs recommended readings:
ANTHONY W. (1993): Recovery from Mental Illness: The Guiding Vision of the Mental Health Services in the 1990âs. Psychosocial Rehabilitation Journal 16(4). 11â23.
HARANGOZĂ, J. â SZITA, B. â BESE, B. â MĂREY, ZS. â GALLAI. I. (2015): Trauma, dissociation, schizophrenia, and the split mind of professionals. Annals of Psychiatry and Mental Health 3(6): 1044.
TĂNDE, BULYĂKI; ISTVĂN, GALLAI; JUDIT, HARANGOZĂ; ILONA, JĂNOSNĂ KASZĂS; LAJOS, SZABĂ. 2012. The Journey from Mental Disorder Towards Recovery. PSYCHIATRIA HUNGARICA 36: 2 pp. 213-224.
9. Dorottya Sikâs recommended readings:
ANDREA RĂCZ, DOROTTYA SIK (2020): To stay or to leave? The phenomenon of running away, as a form of criticism against the child protection system
ANDREA RACZ, DOROTTYA SIK (2020) Social (Im)Mobility and Social Work with Families with Children. Case Study of a Disadvantaged Microregion in Hungary
10. EnikĆ VirĂĄghâs recommended readings:
DIBENNARDO, Rebecca A. 2018. âIdeal Victims and Monstrous Offenders: How the News Media Represent Sexual Predators.â Socius 4: 1â20. https://doi.org/10.1177/2378023118802512.
DU MONT, JANICE, KAREN-LEE MILLER, AND TERRI L. MYHR. 2003. âThe Role of âReal Rapeâ and âReal Victimâ Stereotypes in the Police Reporting Practices of Sexually Assaulted Women.â Violence Against Women 9 (4): 466â86.
GREER, CHRIS, AND EUGENE MCLAUGHLIN. 2012. âMedia Justice: Madeleine McCann, Intermediatization and âTrial by Mediaâin the British Press.â Theoretical Criminology 16 (4): 395â416. https://doi.org/10.1177/1362480612454559.
GREER, CHRIS. 2017. âNews Media, Victims and Crime.â In Victims, Crime and Society, edited by Pamela Davies, Peter Francis, and Chris Greer, 2nd ed., 48â65. Los Angeles; London; New Delhi; Singapore; Washington DC; Melbourn: SAGE. https://doi.org/10.4135/9781446212202.n2.
11. Judit TakĂĄcsâs recommended readings:
TAKĂCS J. (2022) How to Conserve Kertbenyâs Grave? A Case of Post-Communist Queer Necrophilia. 62-75 in Katalin MiklĂłssy & Markku Kangaspuro (eds.) Conservatism and Memory Politics in Russia and Eastern Europe. Abingdon: Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003251743-4
TAKĂCS J (2017) Listing Homosexuals since the 1920s and under State Socialism in Hungary. 157-170. In C. Baker (ed.) Gender in 20th-Century Eastern Europe and the USSR. Palgrave: London.
13. Vajda JĂșliaâs recommended readings:
JULIA VAJDA: Left on Our Own, in: https://www.theverylongview.com/WATH/
MARCELINE LORIDAN-IVANS: But You Did Not Come Back, Faber and Faber, 2016