Valentin Vodnik, The Illyrian Odes, and Political Censorship
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18690/scn.17.2.144-163.2024Keywords:
Valentin Vodnik, “Illyria Revived”, Habsburg Monarchy, Slovenian poetry, political censorshipAbstract
This article examines the first serious conflict between Slovenian poetry and the imperial authorities in the early 19th century using the example of two “Illyrian” odes by Valentin Vodnik. His “Ilirija Revived”, which was published during the French rule, brought serious problems for Vodnik after the restoration of Habsburg power in Carniola as he was accused of “Francophilia”. Following the Emperor’s decision, he was forced to retire and his poem remained banned for several decades. The present article outlines the dynamics of Vodnik’s relationship with the authorities and explains in more detail how and why he was subjected to political censorship.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2024 University of Maribor Press

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Copyrights
This journal is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike License (CC BY-SA). https://opendefinition.org/licenses/cc-by-sa/
Plagiarism Policy
Slavia Centralis is a non-commercial, open access, electronic research journal. As such it pledges to uphold certain ethical principles regarding confidentiality, originality and intellectual fair play. Slavia Centralis takes copyright infringement and plagiarism very seriously and all submissions may be checked with duplication detection software.
Authors must:
- Ensure that all work submitted is original, fully referenced and that all authors are represented accurately. The submission must be exclusive and not under consideration elsewhere.
- Obtain all permissions from copyright owners for 3rd party material (e.g. quotations, illustrations, tables, etc.).