Marianne Lunzer

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Marianne Lunzer-Lindhausen (born Pig, on July 21, 1919 in Vienna ) is an Austrian journalist .

Life

Marianne Pig wrote in 1941 about natural representation at Waldemar Bonsels (Bonsels was the author of the highly successful BieneMaja ) and became in 1942 at the University of Vienna Dr. phil. PhD.

In 1943 she began to work at the Institute for Newspaper Studies at the University of Vienna, was not burdened by National Socialism and completed her habilitation here in 1953 as Marianne Lunzer with the work The Changeover in Austrian Press Policy - The Replacing of Negative Methods by Positive Methods . In 1954 she received the Venia Legendi . In 1973 she was appointed professor.

At the end of her career at the University of Vienna, she succeeded Kurt Paupié, who died early, as head of the institute in 1981, and was full professor at the university's institute for journalism until 1985 . In 1984, Wolfgang Langenbucher , invited by Science Minister Hertha Firnberg in 1982 , came as her successor to today's Institute for Media and Communication Studies.

In 2014 Marianne Lunzer celebrated her 95th birthday. Her student at the time, Hugo Portisch , who was doing his dissertation at the institute in 1951, mentioned her appreciatively in his autobiography It was always exciting .

Fonts (selection)

  • What is freedom of the press? Institute for Newspaper Studies at the University of Vienna, Vienna 1954
  • The emergence of the Austrian parties and their press. Newspaper and Research, Vienna 1954
  • The attempt to steer the press in Austria from 1848 to 1870. Institute for Newspaper Studies, Vienna 1954
  • The change in Austrian press policy - the displacement of negative methods by positive ones. From the newspaper ban in October 1848 to the final expansion of an organized press apparatus in 1870. Vienna 1953
  • The Viennese Ordinari newspapers of the 17th century. Institute for Newspaper Studies, Vienna 1953
  • Contributions to the Austrian press history of the 16th century. Institute for Newspaper Studies, Vienna 1952

literature

  • Wolfgang Duchkowitsch (Ed.): Media history. Research and practice. Festival ceremony for Marianne Lunzer-Lindhausen on her 65th birthday. Böhlau, Vienna 1985.
  • Wolfgang Duchkowitsch (Ed.): Creativity from the crisis. Concepts for social communication in the First Republic. Festschrift for Marianne Lunzer-Lindhausen. 1st edition, Literas University Press, Vienna 1991.
  • Wolfgang Duchkowitsch: Lunzer-Lindhausen, Marianne. In: Brigitta Keintzel, Ilse Korotin (ed.): Scientists in and from Austria. Life - work - work. Böhlau, Vienna 2002, ISBN 3-205-99467-1 , p. 486f.

Web links

Individual evidence

  • Hugo Portisch : It was always exciting , Ecowin Verlag, Wals bei Salzburg 2015, section A journalism lesson in Vienna and in Africa , p. 235 ff.