Folytatásos regények a Bácsmegyei Naplóban 1928-1941 /

The Bácsmegyei Napló was published in Subotica between 1903 and 1941, and it was considered the most important daily newspaper of the minority Hungarians in Vojvodina from 1920 until it was closed in 1941. The Bácsmegyei Napló began publishing serialized novels in 1928, as its editors considered it...

Teljes leírás

Elmentve itt :
Bibliográfiai részletek
Szerző: Hicsik Dóra
Dokumentumtípus: Cikk
Megjelent: 2023
Sorozat:Délvidéki szemle 10 No. 2
Kulcsszavak:Sajtótörténet - magyar - Szabadka - 1928-1941, Bácsmegyei Napló
Tárgyszavak:
Online Access:http://acta.bibl.u-szeged.hu/88958
Leíró adatok
Tartalmi kivonat:The Bácsmegyei Napló was published in Subotica between 1903 and 1941, and it was considered the most important daily newspaper of the minority Hungarians in Vojvodina from 1920 until it was closed in 1941. The Bácsmegyei Napló began publishing serialized novels in 1928, as its editors considered it important to present Hungarian novels from Vojvodina with only few of them published elsewhere. In my research, I found eight serialized novels that had been unknown to literary history: Varázstükör (Magic Mirror) by Diószeghy Tibor; Oktalan szerelem (Love Without Reason) by Gergely Boriska; Fekete Csillag: Regényes elbeszélés a serdültebb ifjúság számára (Black Star: A story for the Adolescent Youth) by Karlócai/Létmányi József; Báró a katedrán (Baron in Professorship)by Novoszel Andor; Erős Mátyás mestersége (Erős Mátyás’ Craft) and Moszkvától Párizsig és vissza: Filmregény (From Moscow to Paris and Back: A Film Novel) by Tamás István. Examining the novels published in the newspaper, it becomes clear that most of them are for light entertainment, but there are also some reportage and historical novels. There is, however, a fading trend; when the supplement was launched, it was important to find original Vojvodina novels, but by the end of the 1930s, reprints of works already published in volume form predominate.
Terjedelem/Fizikai jellemzők:131-147
ISSN:2416-223X