Nationalt Tidsskrift (magazine)
Nationalt Tidsskrift (Norwegian: National Journal) was a political magazine which was published in the period 1916–1945. The magazine was an antisemitic publication and had a radical right-wing political stance.
Editor | Mikal Sylten |
---|---|
Categories | Political magazine |
Founder | Mikal Sylten |
Founded | 1916 |
Final issue | 1945 |
Country | Norway |
Language | Norwegian |
History and profile
Nationalt Tidsskrift was started in 1916 by typographer Mikal Sylten, whose ultimate goal was to combat Zionism.[1][2] The emblem of the magazine was a swastika.[3] Although the circulation of the magazine was not high, it caused tensions due to its consistent and radical antisemitic propaganda which was based on the content taken from the German publications, including Theodor Fritsch’s Der Hammer.[1][4] Sylten edited the magazine until 1945 when it ceased publication.[1][4]
References
- Kristin Brattelid (2004). Mikal Sylten: et antisemittisk livsprosjekt (MA thesis) (in Norwegian). University of Oslo. hdl:10852/23429.
- Monica Žagar (2011). Knut Hamsun: The Dark Side of Literary Brilliance. Seattle: University of Washington Press. p. 191. ISBN 978-0-295-80056-1.
- Jan-Erik Ebbestad Hansen (2015). "The Jews – Teachers of the Nazis? Anti-Semitism in Norwegian Anthroposophy". Humboldt-Universität. doi:10.18452/8179. Retrieved 8 November 2021.
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(help) - Christhard Hoffmann (2020). "A Marginal Phenomenon? Historical Research on Antisemitism in Norway, 1814 – 1945". In Jonathan Adams; Cordelia Heß (eds.). Antisemitism in the North. Vol. 1. Berlin; Boston: De Gruyter. doi:10.1515/9783110634822-010. ISBN 9783110631937. S2CID 213062186.
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