Somewhat more than a century ago an ex-President of the United States came to visit Hungary. While in Budapest, he requested to see a major Hungarian novelist whose work he had read and liked. Do we know the name of this former chief executive and are we prepared to identify which Hungarian prose writer we are talking about? This may call for at least one more legitimate inquiry: when a Hungarian playwright visited the United States in 1927, six of his plays had had runs of more than 100 performances on Broadway in New York City. He received a heros welcome in the American metropolis and an audience with President Coolidge. Are we ready, ready in a cultural sense, to pinpoint the identity of this particular playwright? The above bits of cultural inquiry are the spin-offs of larger intercultural issues and themes, or even iconographic representations that are prompted in profusion by the more than two dozen essays and studies included in the present volume. The 26 contributionsby 27 H