1. In general, see Bitton Livia , “Jewish Nationalism in Hungary,” unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, New York University, 1968.
2. A comparative view is given in Ezra Mendelsohn, The Jews of East Central Europe Between the Two Wars (Bloomington, 1983), ch. 2.
3. Cf. Révai's József 1937 essay, “Marxismus és népiesség,” in his Marxismus, népiesség, magyarság (Budapest, 1949).
4. There is a clear account in Borbandi, Ungarischer Populismus; see also the useful belittlement of village-exploring “sociography” in Michael Sozan, The History of Hungarian Ethnography (Washington, 1977), pp. 245ff.
5. Literature is cited by Peter Nagy in “The Ideas of the Hungarian Radical Right,” East European Quarterly 20 (1986): 215-25; George Barany, “Hungary: From Aristocratic to Proletarian Nationalism,” in Peter Sugar and Ivo J. Lederer, eds., Nationalism in Eastern Europe (Seattle, 1969), pp. 294ff; and Borbandi, Ungarischer Populismus, pp. 91ff.