“What the map cuts up, the story cuts across,” writes Michel de Certeau in The Practice of Everyday Life. This paper seeks to tell a different story of the communist period by drawing on sources like prayerbooks, devotions, and shrine cards typically seen as irrelevant to the broader geopolitical and territorial disputes of 20th-century eastern Europe. In so doing, this paper renders visible the maps created by lay Catholics as they moved between Marian shrines and rural chapels that dotted the landscape, and I argue that another map of Hungary emerges, one that participates in but is not fully subsumed by the geopolitical border disputes of the time. Through a study of Hungarian-language sources that cut across such borders, I show how these lay Catholic cartographies were grounded in the notion that Hungary was, is, and will always be Mary’s country, that Mary is, in fact, what makes Hungary.
Attached Paper
Annual Meeting 2024
Mapping Mary: Lay Cartographies of Communist Hungary
Papers Session: Interpreting Cartographies
Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)