Book Cover
E-book
Author Hargittai, István, author.

Title Brilliance in exile : the diaspora of Hungarian scientists from John von Neumann to Katalin Karikó / István Hargittai, Balazs Hargittai
Published Budapest, New York : Central European University Press, 2023
©2023

Copies

Description 1 online resource (332 pages) : illustrations (some color)
Contents Foreword / Ivan T. Berend -- Joseph A. Galamb -- Philipp Lenard -- Introduction: Fleeing -- Ervin Bauer -- Stephen Brunauer -- Ladislaus Farkas -- Dennis Gabor -- George de Hevesy -- Theodore von Kármán -- Arthur Koestler -- Stephen W. Kuffler -- Nicholas Kurti -- Cornelius Lanczos -- John von Neumann -- Egon Orowan -- Michael Polanyi -- George Pólya -- Elizabeth Rona -- Leo Szilard -- Maria Telkes -- Edward Teller -- Eugene P. Wigner "Control" : Imre Bródy -- Introduction: Before It Is Too Late -- Michael and Alice Balint -- Ladislao José Biro -- Paul Erdos -- John G. Kemeny -- Olga Kennard -- Peter D. Lax -- George J. Popjak -- Valentine L. Telegdi -- Laszlo Tisza -- Introduction: Post-War and Pre-Soviet Trauma -- Endre A. Balazs -- Zoltan Bay -- Georg von Békésy -- Lars Ernster -- John C. Harsanyi -- Avram Hershko -- Georg and Eva Klein -- Albert Szent-Györgyi -- Introduction: In the Wake of Suppressed Revolution -- Laszlo Z. Bito -- Andy Grove -- Peter Lengyel -- Joseph Nagyvary -- George A. Olah -- Gabor A. Somorjai -- Introduction: Escape from "Paradise" -- Gyorgy Buzsaki -- Gabor Fodor -- Katalin Karikó -- Charles Simonyi -- Agnes Ullmann -- "Control" : Árpád Furka -- Conclusion: Thirty years later, and continuing
Summary "By addressing the enigma of the exceptional success of Hungarian emigrant scientists and telling their life stories, Brilliance in Exile combines scholarly analysis with fascinating portrayals of uncommon personalities. István and Balazs Hargittai discuss the conditions that led to five different waves of emigration of scientists from the early twentieth century to the present. Although these exodes were driven by a broad variety of personal motivations, the attraction of an open society with inclusiveness, tolerance, and - needless to say - better circumstances for working and living, was the chief force drawing them abroad. While emigration from East to West is a general phenomenon, this book explains why and how the emigration of Hungarian scientists is distinctive. The high number of Nobel Prizes among this group is only one indicator. Multicultural tolerance, a quickly emerging, considerably Jewish, urban middle class, and a very effective secondary school system were positive legacies of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy. Multiple generations, shaped by these conditions, suffered from the increasingly exclusionist, intolerant, antisemitic, and economically stagnating environment, and chose to go elsewhere. "I would rather have roots than wings, but if I cannot have roots, I shall use wings," explained Leo Szilard, one of the fathers of the Atom Bomb"-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on May 05, 2023)
Subject Scientists -- Hungary -- Biography
Expatriate scientists -- Biography
Hungarian diaspora.
Electronic books.
BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Science & Technology.
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Emigration & Immigration.
Hungarians -- Migrations.
Scientists.
SUBJECT Hungary -- Emigration and immigration -- History -- 20th century
Subject Hungary.
Genre/Form Biographies.
History.
Form Electronic book
Author Hargittai, Balazs, author.
Berend, T. Iván (Tibor Iván), 1930- writer of foreword.
LC no. 2022059803
ISBN 9789633866078
9633866073