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===Print and media=== Ever since the early 1990s, Lviv has been the spiritual home of the post-independence Ukrainian-language publishing industry. Lviv Book Forum (International Publishers' Forum) is the biggest book fair in Ukraine. Lviv is the centre of promotion of the [[Ukrainian Latin alphabet]] (Latynka). The most popular newspapers in Lviv are "[[Vysoky Zamok (newspaper)|Vysoky Zamok]]", "[[Ekspres]]", "Lvivska hazeta", "Ratusha", Subotna poshta", "Hazeta po-lvivsky", "Postup" and others. Popular magazines include "Lviv Today", "Chetver", "RIA" and "Ї". "Lviv Today" is a Ukrainian English-speaking magazine, whose content includes information about the business, advertisement and entertainment spheres in Lviv, and the country in general. The Lviv oblast television company transmits on channel 12. There are three private television channels operating from Lviv: "LUKS", "NTA" and "ZIK". There are 17 regional and all-Ukrainian radio stations operating in the city. A number of information agencies exist in the city such as "ZIK", "Zaxid.net", "Гал-info", "Львівський портал" and others. Lviv is home to one of the oldest Polish-language newspapers {{Lang|pl|[[Gazeta Lwowska]]}} which was first published in 1811 and still exists in a bi-weekly form. Among other publications were such titles as *''Kurier Lwowski'': associated with people's movement which existed from 1883 to 1935. Among the writers who cooperated with it were such renowned names as [[Eliza Orzeszkowa]], [[Jan Kasprowicz]], [[Bolesław Limanowski]], [[Władysław Orkan]] as well as [[Ivan Franko]], *''Słowo Lwowskie'' (1895–1939): A right-wing daily which cooperated with [[Władysław Reymont]], [[Henryk Sienkiewicz]], [[Kazimierz Przerwa-Tetmajer|Kazimierz Tetmajer]], [[Leopold Staff]], [[Jerzy Żuławski]] and [[Gabriela Zapolska]]. Among its editors-in-chief was [[Stanisław Grabski]]. In the early 20th century ''Słowo'''s circulation was 20,000 and it was the first Polish newspaper to publish a serialisation of Reymont's novel ''[[Chłopi]]''.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.reporterzy.info/article.php?go=historia,13,slowo_polskie_dziennik_z_ponadstuletnia_tradycja |title=Slowo Polskie – a daily with 100-year tradition |publisher=Reporterzy.info |date=20 November 2007 |access-date=3 May 2012 |archive-date=15 March 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220315054852/https://reporterzy.info/13,slowo-polskie-dziennik-z-ponadstuletnia-tradycj.html |url-status=live }}</ref> After World War II Słowo was moved to [[Wrocław]] with first postwar issue published on 1 November 1946. *''[[Czerwony Sztandar (Lviv newspaper)|Czerwony Sztandar]]'': A Soviet daily published between 1939 and 1941. {{More citations needed section|date=March 2011}} <!--''Not sure about the notability of some of these following publications '' --> Starting in the 20th century a new movement started with authors from Central Europe. In Lviv a small [[Neo-romanticism|neo-romantic]] group of authors formed around the [[lyricist]] Schmuel Jankev Imber.{{Who|date=March 2011}}{{Citation needed|date=March 2011}} Small print offices produced collections of modern poems and [[short story|short stories]] and through emigration a large network<!-- Of what ? -->was established. A second smaller group{{Who|date=March 2011}} in the 1930s tried to create a connection between [[Avant-garde|avantgarde]] art and Yiddish culture. Members of this group were [[Debora Vogel]], [[Rachel Auerbach]] and [[Rachel Korn]]. The Holocaust destroyed this movement with Debora Vogel amongst many other Yiddish authors murdered by the Germans in the 1940s.{{Citation needed|date=March 2011}}
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