Difference between revisions of "Alma M. Karlin Virtual Home"
(image into teaser) |
|||
Line 28: | Line 28: | ||
{{Teaser| | {{Teaser| | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{Image|Alma M. Karlin - portrait.jpg}} | ||
+ | |||
This [[Alma M. Karlin Virtual Home|virtual residence]] is dedicated to [[Alma Karlin]] (1889–1950), an extraordinary traveller, polyglot, theosophist, and writer from Celje. From 1919 to 1927 she travelled to South and North America, the Pacific Islands, Australia, and various Asian countries and supported herself with odd jobs and writing. Her travel and fiction novels (written in German) became very popular in the 1930s (''The Odyssey of a Lonely Woman'' and ''The Spell of the South Sea'', a novel in two volumes was reprinted several times in the edition of over 100,000 copies). During the war her work was banned and in 1944 she joined the Partisans. After the war she lived in a small house in Pečovnik above Celje in straitened circumstances together with her companion [[Thea Schreiber Gamelin]]. | This [[Alma M. Karlin Virtual Home|virtual residence]] is dedicated to [[Alma Karlin]] (1889–1950), an extraordinary traveller, polyglot, theosophist, and writer from Celje. From 1919 to 1927 she travelled to South and North America, the Pacific Islands, Australia, and various Asian countries and supported herself with odd jobs and writing. Her travel and fiction novels (written in German) became very popular in the 1930s (''The Odyssey of a Lonely Woman'' and ''The Spell of the South Sea'', a novel in two volumes was reprinted several times in the edition of over 100,000 copies). During the war her work was banned and in 1944 she joined the Partisans. After the war she lived in a small house in Pečovnik above Celje in straitened circumstances together with her companion [[Thea Schreiber Gamelin]]. | ||
Revision as of 11:10, 29 May 2011
Alma Karlin collections in Slovenia
Alma Karlin's legacy is scattered among several institutions. Most of the ethnological collection from her travels is held by the Celje Regional Museum, which also prepared an exhibition in honour of the 120th anniversary of her birth (2009–2011).
The Celje Museum of Recent History holds the Alma Karlin Fund with 850 items, mainly postwar correspondence, photographs, drawings and book covers by Alma and Thea Schreiber Gamelin as well as testimonials by people who knew her personally.
Another important collection is maintained by the NUK (National and University Library) National Manuscript Collection which contains books, magazines, posters, and manuscripts (including her hand-made dictionary of 10 languages). In 2006 NUK displayed them in an exhibition which marked the 55th anniversary of her death.
See also
- Celje Central Library
- Celje Regional Museum
- Celje Museum of Recent History
- NUK National Manuscript Collection
External links
- Alma Karlin Virtual Home project (in Slovenian, English and German)
- Alma Karlin on Wikipedia (in English and in German)
- Alma Karlin on DLib.si - Digital Library of Slovenia
- The Odyssey of a Lonely Woman documentary on Alma Karlin on IMDb