The FWF-funded project "Intertextuality in the Legal Papers of Karl Kraus. A Scholarly Digital Edition" (FWF project no. P 31138-G30) was a cooperation between the ACDH-CH, the Vienna City Library, and the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Digital History. During this project, the legal papers of the Austrian satirist Karl Kraus (1874‒1936) were edited, provided digitally and contextualized with Kraus’ oeuvre as a whole.

Although Kraus’s attitude towards the courts in the Habsburg period had been predominantly critical and he frequently attacked reactionary judges and biased jurors, the constitutional reform of the Austrian Republic in 1919 and the abolition of death penalty marked a decisive break for Kraus. He especially welcomed the reform of the Press Law of 1922, which marked the beginning of a growing fondness for litigation. In the same year, Oskar Samek became his lawyer. In the course of the following 15 years, they were involved in over 200 legal actions together.

The material documenting these actions is held by the Vienna City Library and was edited in the course of this project. The ACDH-CH provided the technical framework, developed the data model for the digital edition, and supported the project’s outreach activities.

Contact

Laura Untner

 

Project duration

09/2018–04/2022

 

Funding

FWF P 31138-G30

 
Links

Karl Kraus Legal Papers

 

Twitter Hashtag

#LegalKraus