Tina (magazine)
Categories | Youth magazine |
---|---|
Founded | 1971 |
First issue | 26 May 1971 |
Final issue Number | 29 December 1976 231 |
Company | Vjesnik |
Country | Yugoslavia |
Based in | Zagreb |
Tina was a girls' magazine which existed in Yugoslavia between 1971 and 1976. It was published by Vjesnik and was the only publication in the country aimed at female youth. Its title was a reference to a British girls' magazine, Princess Tina, which had been established by Fleetway Publications in February 1967.[1]
History and profile
[edit]Tina was first published on 26 May 1971.[2] Its publisher was Vjesnik, a publishing house based in Zagreb.[1][2] The company was founded by the Socialist Alliance of Working People, one of the largest communist political organizations in Yugoslavia.[1] In its early period Tina copied Western youth magazines, but it did not work,[3] and the magazine sold only 35,739 copies in the first year.[2] It gained success from 1974 when it began to cover materials specific to the Yugoslav setting, including progressive pop-culture, literary work and topics related to girls' daily lives.[3] That year the circulation of Tina was 113,032 copies.[2] The magazine infrequently published advertisements and other promotional content.[3] Its editors and contributors included Gruda Špicer, Željko Žutelija and Vesna Lamza.[2]
Tina sold less than 90,000 copies in 1975.[2] Next year its circulation dropped to 77,542 copies which led to its closure after the publication of the issue 231 dated 29 December 1976.[1][2]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Dunja Majstorović (2023). "Windows Towards the West: Exploring the Emergence of Popular Magazines in Yugoslavia in the 1960s and Early 1970s". Journal of Communication Inquiry. 47 (1): 7, 17, 21. doi:10.1177/01968599221081120. S2CID 247099510.
- ^ a b c d e f g Reana Senjković (2011). "Negotiating (socialist) girlhood(s): The case of the only girls' magazine in socialist Yugoslavia". International Journal of Cultural Studies. 14 (5): 483–497. doi:10.1177/1367877911399202. S2CID 144042513.
- ^ a b c Reana Senjković (2017). "Popular Hybrids the Yugoslav Way: What a Girl Would Buy for Her Pocket Money". In Dijana Jelača; Maša Kolanović; Danijela Lugarić (eds.). The Cultural Life of Capitalism in Yugoslavia. (Post)Socialism and Its Other (1st ed.). Cham: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 209–222. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-47482-3_12. ISBN 978-3-319-47482-3.