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Query: "keywords" (Styria) .

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1.
Transforming language ideologies in the Styrias and in Prekmurje
Jakob Wiedner, Alja Lipavic Oštir, Chiara Wagner, Dorian Penšek-Rader, Jernej Čelofiga, 2025, original scientific article

Abstract: The article examines how monolingual ideologies shape language policies and identities in the Slovenian-Austrian border region through a qualitative analysis of interviews. Rooted in ethno-linguistic nationalism, these ideologies continue to influence language policies, particularly through linguistic purism and a persistent "discourse of threat". Monolingual narratives often overlook historical multilingual realities and cross-border communities. Interview data show that younger generations are shifting toward linguistic pragmatism, embracing local dialects, English, and a European identity. Overall, while nationalistic discourses still linger, generational change and EU integration foster a more inclusive understanding of languages and identities in the region.
Keywords: German language, Slovene language, Styria, Prekmurje, linguistic capital, discursive practices, vernacular nationalism, qualitative analyses
Published in DiRROS: 30.01.2026; Views: 298; Downloads: 155
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2.
The border as a space of exchange in the 18th century : commissioners’ networks and Joseph Hueber’s architectural workshop in Croatia and Slovenia
Dubravka Botica, 2025, review article

Abstract: In Central Europe, borders are not solid barriers but are rather fluid. Central Europe is a deeply connected cultural space of intensive exchange (M. Csáky) in which artistic production is shaped by densely intertwined mutual contacts and influences between individual countries and regions. This is particularly visible in the activities of large architectural, painting and sculptural workshops in the 18th century, which had a wide network of collaborators throughout the area. A key role in the rapid and far-reaching transfer of artistic solutions was played by the commissioners of artworks, both ecclesiastical and secular, strongly connected by a dense network of contacts that did not stop at (today’s national) borders. This paper studies the example of the activities of the architectural workshop of Joseph Hueber from Graz (1715–1787) in historical Styria, present-day Austria, and Lower Styria (present-day Slovenia) and northwestern Croatia to explore the method and scope of the workshop’s work, as well as the reconstruction of contacts between commissioners from the ranks of the Styrian, Hungarian and Croatian nobility.
Keywords: Central Europe, Styria, Slovenia, Croatia, Baroque architecture, borders, building workshops, Joseph Hueber, art patronage, the nobility
Published in DiRROS: 21.01.2026; Views: 273; Downloads: 121
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