Miklos Konrad is Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of History at the Research Centre for the Humanities and at the Ignac Goldziher Jewish Historical and Cultural Research Institute in Budapest, Hungary.
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Description
Acknowledgments Note on Names and Statistical Figures Abbreviations Introduction 1. The Historical Context of the Conversions of Hungarian Jews 2. Numbers of Conversions, Chronological Patterns, and Social Reactions 3. Profiles of Hungarian Jewish Converts 4. Paths to Conversion-Portraits 5. After Conversion Afterword Bibliography Index
"Miklos Konrad's study of conversion in Hungary is a major contribution to the social history of Central European Jewry in the modern period. The author's treatment of a potentially explosive subject is calm and nuanced. It is noteworthy for its comparative perspective and for its rich and often wide-ranging evidentiary base."-Todd M. Edelman, author of Broadening Jewish History: Towards a Social History of Ordinary Jews "Confronted by a glass ceiling thwarting their integration into Hungarian society at the turn of the twentieth century, members of the economic and cultural Jewish elite were faced with a stark dilemma, leave their community through conversion, or remain steadfast to it at the expense of their advancement. Konrad's comprehensive analysis sensitively examines the decisions of a significant number to exit, at the same time shedding light on those who chose loyalty. A very important contribution to the history of Jews in Hungary."-Michael K. Silber, editor of Jews in the Hungarian Economy, 1760-1945

