"The most impressive aspect of this book is the very extensive field work that Kürti carried out in Hungary and Transylvania in the 1980s and 1990s. He relates not only what he learned about life in both places, before and after the collapse of communism, but also tells the story of how he experienced these changing political circumstances and how it affected his work. This is gripping stuff. Moreover, his reporting includes not only the standard stuff of ethnography, what was going on in people's lives while he was there, but also what was happening politically and in popular culture that influenced how people understood their circumstances. Tales of political actions, news reporting, an 'underground' youth culture, and the musings of literary figures are all grist for Kürti's mill." — John W. Cole, University of Massachusetts, Amherst"The Remote Borderland lays out very intelligently a theoretical and historical problematization of Transylvanian identity from the standpoint of Hungarian and Romanian elites. It contextualizes the historical development of Transylvania as both a remote and border region within the relevant scholarship on pre and postcommunist East Europe. By so doing Kürti seeks to provoke a series of questions about the ambiguous links between nation, state, and territory—questions that have potentially broad comparative significance for anthropologists, sociologists, historians, and political scientists." — Douglas R. Holmes, author of Cultural Disenchantments: Worker Peasantries in Northern Italy