@inbook{10.7591/j.ctt1287d08.6, ISBN = {9780801452871}, URL = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.7591/j.ctt1287d08.6}, abstract = {On 1 October 1922, the historian and author Richard Kralik celebrated his seventieth birthday, and the Viennese Catholic community took the opportunity to honor their hero and extol the strengths of their intellectual movement. The author Hermann Bahr and the Swiss anthropologist Wilhelm Oehl each wrote laudatory pieces in the Christian Social newspaper, theReichspost. The following day, a full-page spread recounted the festivities from the “Kralik-Feier,” hosted at Kralik’s manor in Grinzing, a wealthy district of Vienna.¹ According to the article, the celebration attested to the “cultural sense and will” of Austrian Catholics while displaying their commitment to Kralik’s}, bookauthor = {Janek Wasserman}, booktitle = {Black Vienna: The Radical Right in the Red City, 1918–1938}, edition = {1}, pages = {15--46}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, title = {The Emergence of Black Vienna}, year = {2014} }