The full title was Egység, Irodalom, Müvészet which means "Unity, Literature, Art".
[1] The first issue was illustrated with a fresco plan Uitz's Emberiség (Humanity), a work commenced in 1919 but soon abandoned when the Hungarian Soviet Republic was crushed by the White Terror.
[1] As his accompanying text explained, this work was created according to the principles advocated by Georg Lukacs and Iván Hevesy, by which a future socialist culture should adapt the culture of the medieval period, whereby despite differing content, strong iconic forms could be used to instill a new world view.
[1] In February 1923 Egység published a joint manifesto (Nyilatkozat) signed by Ernő Kállai, Alfréd Kemény, László Moholy-Nagy and Laszlo Peri.
Kemény also contributed "Notes to the Russian Artists’ Exhibition in Berlin", (Originally published as “Jegyzetek az orosz mũvészek berlini kiállitáshoz,”), Egység (February, 1923).