Kritika (magazine)

[2] Its most active collaborators were Miklós Béládi Zoltán Kenyeres and Béla Pomogáts who continued to work for the magazine until 1971.

[4] However, Kritika left its focus on realism and socialist literary criticism in 1966 and began to cover articles on structuralism.

[5] In 1971 the Hungarian authorities ended the affiliation of the magazine with the Institute of Literary Studies, and Pál Pándi was appointed editor-in-chief of Kritika in 1972.

[2] Immediately after his appointment the central committee of the ruling Socialist Workers' Party banned all work on structuralism.

Notable contributors of this period included Pál Almási, István Király, Péter Agárdi, Gábor Ráfis Hajdú, and Géza Vasy.