Less to his credit (at least by the lights of most people I know), Sen. Fulbright was also a segregationist, and opposed the passing of President Johnson's 1964 civil rights legislation. And that makes my Fulbright award ironic, in that when I asked my host institution in Eger, Esterházy Károly College, what they would most like me to teach in their American Studies program, I was told “your Civil Rights Movement.” Which makes my Fulbright award even more ironic, because it has only been through researching to teach the course that I discovered Sen. Fulbright's segregationism. And so ends the story of Irony in Hungary.
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Thanks to JW, Uncle Sam, the Magyar Republic, Eszterházy Károly College, and my University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, for the next five and a half months I will be exploring Hungary as, I assume, Hungary will explore the U.S. (through me), and I have created this blog so that over that time I can share with you some of my experiences, observations, opinions and so forth. Perhaps more ironies, too.As blogs sometimes turn into bogs, to prevent that here I am going to post just once a week, on Friday (even though today is Monday). I hope you'll return then.
Vislát! (Hungarian for “See ya!”)
Jerry
Little known fact: barack is Hungarian for peach or apricot.