Duga (magazine)

Duga (Дуга, pronounced [ˈdǔːɡa]; meaning Rainbow in English) was a high circulation Yugoslav and Serbian biweekly newsmagazine,[1] which was published from the early 1970s until the 2000s by the Belgrade-based[2] BIGZ publishing company. It had a predecessor which was closed in the 1960s.

History and profile

Duga magazine was put together by the same staff that previously published the Eva i Adam (Eve and Adam) erotic magazine. Having reached a circulation of 270,000 copies in SFR Yugoslavia, with a particular popularity in SR Slovenia, Eva i Adam was eventually shut down in the early 1970s amid the public morality accusations of 'spoiling the youth'. At its inception Duga's initial circulation was around 90,000 copies.[3] The magazine was published on a biweekly basis.[4] Its headquarters was in Belgrade.[4]

Duga quickly became famous for opposition to communism, and interviews with Yugoslav dissidents. In SFR Yugoslavia, from the 1980s especially, the media freedoms existed that were unimaginable in other communist countries. Nevertheless, chief editors were often sacked due to publishing controversial material.

In the 1990s Duga continued controversial reporting, until Dada Vujasinovic was shot dead in 1994, possibly due to an unflattering article about the Serbian warlord and gangster Arkan.[5] It also carried a column by Mira Markovic, wife of Slobodan Milosevic[6] and sociology professor, that often had poetic reports about the seasons amid horrible events in the country, but also carried indirect announcements of high politics sackings in the government. Her column was printed in the magazine until 1997.[6]

gollark: It's not entirely YouTube's fault. There are stupid laws backing it.
gollark: I wonder if there's anything stopping me deciding to copyright random digit sequences in π.
gollark: Also a project after that to procedurally generate all possible sequences of some length of some collection of notes and store it on a disk.
gollark: Er, sequences of musical notes.
gollark: There was also that copyright thing about musical notes recently.

References

  1. The Europa World Year: Kazakhstan - Zimbabwe. Taylor & Francis. 2004. p. 3719. ISBN 978-1-85743-255-8. Retrieved 2 August 2015.
  2. Paul Benjamin Gordiejew (1 February 2012). Voices of Yugoslav Jewry. SUNY Press. p. 336. ISBN 978-1-4384-0447-9. Retrieved 1 April 2016.
  3. Planeta
  4. Ivo Banac (1988). With Stalin Against Tito: Cominformist Splits in Yugoslav Communism. Cornell University Press. p. 284. ISBN 0-8014-2186-1. Retrieved 2 August 2015.
  5. Mitra Nazar (16 July 2015). "The people investigating Serbia's unsolved journalist murders". Index on Censorship. Retrieved 2 August 2015.
  6. Robert Thomas (January 1999). Serbia Under Milošević: Politics in the 1990s. C. Hurst & Co. Publishers. p. 15. ISBN 978-1-85065-367-7. Retrieved 2 August 2015.
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