The People of the Puszta, first published in , grew out of the populist movement. In it, Gyula Illyés wrote about his own country in the narrow sense, the southern part of western Hungary, about his people, not far removed yet from medieval serfdom in those days. Poetry, autobiography and ethnography are wielded with political ideas into an artistic whole; the passionate, universally. The People of the Puszta, first published in , grew out of the populist movement. In it, Gyula Illyés wrote about his own country in the narrow sense, the southern part of western Hungary, about his people, not far removed yet from medieval serfdom in those days. Poetry, autobiography and ethnography are wielded with political ideas into an artistic whole; the passiona/5(7). · Editor’s Note: Gyula Illyés (–), poet, writer and essayist, one of the major masters of modern Hungarian literature, published People of the Puszta in , a classic account of the life of farm servants on the large land estates of Transdanubia, among whom he grew up as a machinist’s son. He worked and studied in Paris between and , and became connected with the .
People of the Puszta (Gyula Illyés). Peter the Priest (Maurus Jokai). Portraits of a Marriage (Sándor Márai). The Prince and His Magic Horse (Gyula Illyés). Quarantine in the Grand Hotel (Jenő Rejtő). Gyula Illyes, Gyula Illyés. Corvina Press, - Hungary - pages. Bibliographic information. Title. People of the Puszta Hungarian library. Gyula Illyés (2 November - 15 April ) was a Hungarian poet and novelist. He was one of the so-called népi ("from the people") writers, named so because they aimed to show - propelled by strong sociological interest and left-wing convictions - the disadvantageous conditions of their native land.
4 quotes from Gyula Illyés: 'The life of the hero of the tale is, at the outset, overshadowed by bitter and hopeless struggles; one doubts that the little swineherd will ever be able to vanquish the awful Dragon with the twelve heads. The People of the Puszta, first published in , grew out of the populist movement. In it, Gyula Illyés wrote about his own country in the narrow sense, the southern part of western Hungary, about his people, not far removed yet from medieval serfdom in those days. The People of the Puszta, first published in , grew out of the populist movement. In it, Gyula Illyés wrote about his own country in the narrow sense, the southern part of western Hungary, about his people, not far removed yet from medieval serfdom in those days. Poetry, autobiography and ethnography are wielded with political ideas into an artistic whole; the passiona.
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