The monograph was the first to analyse the overall role of the Catholic Church in Slovenia during the First World War. It problematizes the Church's pastoral and political roles during the time of military semiabsolutism and aspirations to create a common state of Slovenians, Croats and Serbs. In the reviewing process it was recognized as an exemplary work for the treatment of the relationship between religion and war.
COBISS.SI-ID: 34190381
The Monograph treatises the relationship between professionalism and concepts of general mobilisation in the military history of the Slovenian space. It is particularly focused on the war between Napoleon and Austria in 1809 and on the period of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, both of which serve as exemplary cases. The strategic level of the analysis informs the chapter on Admiral Bubnov.
COBISS.SI-ID: 262710784
The book addresses the beginnings of the Slavic literacies and their expansion in the Middle Ages. It gives an especially deepened view of the Slovenian and Russian space; the analysis tries to discern the poetics in the works of Primož Trubar and Maximus the Greek, subtle layers of which emanate from a long and broad cultural evolution.
COBISS.SI-ID: 261286400
The monograph addresses the relationship between tradition and in innovation in Slovenia between the beginning of the 18th century and mid 20th century. Special attention is paid to general tendencies that are reflected in individual and particularly significant or specific creations (The Skofja Loka Passion; the literary opus of A. T. Linhart in Slovenian and German; opus of the spiritualist Adelma Vay de Vaya). The Slovenian lands were the focal point of various influences, which within its own culture and in various epochs shaped the elsewhere barely imaginable connections. This may be seen as its greatest typological characteristic.
COBISS.SI-ID: 266848256
In her contribution the author focuses on poverty in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in the first half of the 1930s, when the global economic crisis also affected the first Yugoslav state profoundly. The author attempts to capture the perception of poverty in the time before WW II from the correspondence of Ivan Pucelj, Minister of Social Policy and National Health, who used to receive requests for monetary aid or help with finding employment from people with various social and educational backgrounds. The contribution focuses on the letters from General Rudolf Maister, painter Rihard Jakopič and cartoonist Hinko Smrekar, dating back to 1932 and 1933, which the author discovered in the legacy of the former Minister.
COBISS.SI-ID: 36458797