Slovene literature

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Template:Short description Template:More citations needed Slovene literature is the literature written in Slovene. It spans across all literary genres with historically the Slovene historical fiction as the most widespread Slovene fiction genre. The Romantic 19th-century epic poetry written by the leading name of the Slovene literary canon, France Prešeren, inspired virtually all subsequent Slovene literature.

Literature played an important role in the development and preservation of Slovene identity because the Slovene nation did not have its own state until 1991 after the Republic of Slovenia emerged from the breakup of Yugoslavia.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite book</ref> Poetry, narrative prose, drama, essay, and criticism kept the Slovene language and culture alive, allowing—in the words of Anton Slodnjak—the Slovenes to become a real nation, particularly in the absence of "masculine" attributes such as political power and authority.<ref name=":0" />

Early literature

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The Freising Manuscripts, dating from the 10th century, most probably written in upper Carinthia, are the oldest surviving documents in Slovene.
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Protestant preacher Primož Trubar, author of the first printed book in Slovene
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The Sower (1907) by the Impressionist painter Ivan Grohar is a metaphor for the Slovenes as a vigorous nation in front of an uncertain future<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and a nation that sows in order that it could harvest.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

There are accounts that cite the existence of an oral literary tradition that preceded the Slovene written literature.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> This was mostly composed of folk songs and also prose, which included tales of myths, fairy tales, and narrations.<ref name=":1">Template:Cite book</ref>

First written text

The earliest documents written in Old Slovene are the Freising manuscripts (Brižinski spomeniki), dated between 972 and 1022, found in 1803 in Freising, Germany. This book was written for the purpose of spreading Christianity to the Alpine Slavs and contained terms concerned with the institutions of authority such as oblast (authority), gospod (lord), and rota (oath).<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

First books

The first printed books in Slovene were Catechismus and Abecedarium, written by the Protestant reformer Primož Trubar in 1550 and printed in Schwäbisch Hall.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Based on the work by Trubar, who from 1555 until 1577 translated into Slovene and published the entire New Testament, Jurij Dalmatin translated the entire Bible into Slovene from c. 1569 until 1578 and published it in 1583. In the second half of the 16th century, Slovene became known to other European languages with the multilingual dictionary, compiled by Hieronymus Megiser. Since then each new generation of Slovene writers has contributed to the growing corpus of texts in Slovene. Particularly, Adam Bohorič's Arcticae horulae, the first Slovene grammar, and Sebastjan Krelj's Postilla Slovenska, became the bases of the development of Slovene literature.<ref name=":1" />

Historical periods

Middle Ages

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Folk poetry

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Protestant reformation

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Counter-reformation

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Baroque

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Age of Enlightenment

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1830–1849

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1849–1899

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Fin-de-siecle

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This period encompasses 1899–1918.

Late realism

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1918–1941

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1918–1926

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1918–1930

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1930–1941

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1941–1945

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1945–1990

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Neo-realism

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Intimism

Template:Main Intimism (Template:Langx) was a poetic movement, the main themes of which were love, disappointment and suffering and the projection of poet's inner feelings onto nature.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Its beginner is Ivan Minatti, who was followed by Lojze Krakar. The climax of Intimism was achieved in 1953 with a collection of poetry titled Poems of the Four (Template:Lang), written by Janez Menart, Ciril Zlobec, Kajetan Kovič and Tone Pavček.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> An often neglected female counterpart to the four was Ada Škerl, whose subjective and pessimistic poetic sentiment was contrary to the post-war revolutionary demands in the People's Republic of Slovenia.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Modernism

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Postmodernism

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Post 1990

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Folk authors

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References

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