Akademska digitalna zbirka SLovenije - logo
E-resources
Full text
Peer reviewed
  • Nacionalistični »enfant ter...
    Dović, Marijan

    Jezik in slovstvo (Tiskana izd.), 04/2024, Volume: 69, Issue: 1-2
    Journal Article

    The relentlessly critical writer Fran Levstik, one of the central figures in Slovenian literature and politics in the decades following the March Revolution of 1848, was also one of the intellectuals of his time who suffered most from censorship. His first volume of poetry, Poems (1854), was harshly suppressed for alleged blasphemy, and his militant nationalist articles in the 1860s led to many publishers receiving lawsuits, heavy fines, and even prison sentences. While Levstik’s literary works were never subject to official censorship during his lifetime this eventually happened after his death with the play Tugomer, originally written by Josip Jurčič, but transformed by Levstik into an opus magnum of Slovenian nationalism. Nepopustljivo kritični Fran Levstik, ena središčnih osebnosti slovenske literature in politike v desetletjih po marčni revoluciji, je bil tudi z vidika cenzure med najbolj izpostavljenimi intelektualci svoje dobe. Že njegov prvenec Pesmi (1854) je bil zaradi domnevne bogokletnosti grobo zatrt, njegovi bojeviti nacionalistični članki v 60. letih 19. stoletja pa so številnim urednikom nakopali tiskovne pravde, visoke globe in celo zaporne kazni. Medtem ko za življenja Levstikova literarna dela niso bila predmet uradne cenzure, se je to po njegovi smrti zgodilo z igro Tugomer, ki jo je po Jurčičevi predlogi ravno Levstik predelal v opus magnum slovenskega nacionalizma.