Kikeriki

The Kikeriki (Cock-a-doodle-do) was a satirical magazine published in Vienna.

Title page

History

It was founded in 1861 by Ottokar Franz Ebersberg, a journalist and playwright who wrote under the pseudonym O. F. Berg. The paper was successful and popular until the time of the First Republic. In the best times the circulation was 25,000 copies.

Until the 1880s the paper had a liberal orientation. Under the increasing influence of the Christian Socialists around Karl Lueger, Kikeriki became sharply anti-Semitic. After the First World War the paper politically approached the Deutschnationalen and since the mid 1920s also the Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei Österreichs – Hitlerbewegung (Austrian NSDAP). In 1933, because of his partisanship of the Reich German National Socialists who came to power on January 30, the Kikeriki was prohibited by the Austrofascist Party Government of Engelbert Dollfuß.

gollark: Videos aren't actually as big as equivalent image sequences because of very clever compression algorithms like H.264, VP9 and AV1, but still very large, especially 4K and such.
gollark: Images are *pretty* big, although new lossy compression stuff like AVIF can get really small sizes without horrible quality loss, and videos are gigantic since they're effectively images and audio stitched together at 60 frames a second (well, or 25, or various other ones).
gollark: Anyway, text is not big - you can fit an entire book (again with compression) into less than a megabyte. In many ebooks the cover image and such are larger than the actual text.
gollark: > Take that backNo. They're basically just PICTURES OF PAGES with some metadata. They are AWFUL for anything but scanned documents.
gollark: It's a highly compressed archive of HTML pages and images and stuff.
  • Julia Schäfer: Vermessen – gezeichnet – verlacht. Judenbilder in populären Zeitschriften 1918–1933.[1] Campus Verlag, Frankfurt, M. 2005. ISBN 3-593-37745-4

References

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