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  • Emotionen in der Berichterstattung des 19. Jahrhunderts
    Kramberger, Petra, 1978-
    At the end of the 1870s, the ethnic tensions between the Slovenian- and German-speaking populations of Lower Styria were at a fever pitch. In the nineteenth century, ethnic Germans represented the ... majority in the towns of Maribor, Celje, and Ptuj as well as in major market towns, and until the First World War they had political authority and control of public life. As part of this linguistic and political constellation, in 1881 the Slovenians began publishing the German-language newspaper Südsteirische Post (South Styria News; Maribor, 1881-1900), which represented Slovenian political, economic, and cultural aspirations. The paperʼs founders wished to use it to silence the ethnic German newspapers, whose articles promulgated ethnic division and incited enmity among the ethnic Germans towards the Slovenians. In addition, a principal reason for founding the paper was the desire for a different discourse that would bring important economic issues to the fore, as well as the social welfare of the population connected with this. Nonetheless, its founding exacerbated the discord between the two ethnic groups, which was primarily reflected in the pages of periodicals in Lower Styria. The emotionally-coloured lead articles that appeared in German periodicals after the Südsteirische Post was founded clearly show how the two ethnic groups were insurmountably at odds with each other, and these articles can be understood as a venue for open conflict between German and Slovenian identity.
    Vrsta gradiva - članek, sestavni del ; neleposlovje za odrasle
    Leto - 2012
    Jezik - nemški
    COBISS.SI-ID - 50412386