Yugoslav literature
Yugoslav literature literature written in Serbo-Croatian, Slovenian, and, especially after World War II, Macedonian languages. The Serbian and Croatian literary languages are similar and generally mutually intelligible, although the Serbs use the Cyrillic alphabet while the Croats use the Roman. The Slovenian language uses the Roman alphabet and is closer to Slovak than to Serbo-Croatian. The Macedonian language uses the Cyrillic and is closely related to Bulgarian.
Medieval and Renaissance Literature
Ecclesiastical works in Old Church Slavonic were produced in the Middle Ages. Under Turkish and later Austrian domination a large body of orally transmitted folk poetry of great richness developed. The remarkable 16th-century flowering of learning and literature in the Adriatic trading city of Ragusa (now Dubrovnik) was a reflection of the Italian Renaissance, spread by commercial contacts and by Slavic youths educated at Padua. It reached its apogee in Osman, the Croatian epic by Ivan Gundulić , and in the plays of Marin Držić (1508?-1567) and Junije Palmotić (1606-57).
The Eighteenth Century
Literature suffered a decline in the 18th cent., when Dubrovnik's political independence was crushed, and a general imitation of foreign writings took hold. However, the writing of history and biography was gaining prominence. Academies flourished, and the epic poems of the academician Ignat Dordić (1675-1737) were notable. The first national bard, Anora Kačić Miošić (1702-60), wrote his poems in ballad and folk style, while the moralist-philosopher Dositej Obradović (1742-1811) introduced fable writing into Yugoslav literature.
The Nineteenth Century: Nationalism and Romanticism
The southern Slavs experienced the general European nationalist upsurge in the late 18th and early 19th cent. In Slovenia this nationalism, which received much of its impetus from Germany, was weakened by a conflict between religious and secular writers. In Croatia the writers looked to Italy for inspiration; in Serbia, to Russia. South Slavic intellectuals responded with enthusiasm to the Pan-Slavism of the Slovak Jan Kollár .
Among the Croatians a cultural movement known as Illyrianism (named after the state established by Napoleon after the defeat of Austria at Wagram in 1809) acted as a stimulant to literature. Illyrianism was suffused with romanticism and nationalism; the latter theme expressed itself throughout the 19th cent. partly in terms of antagonism to Austro-Hungarian rule. An effort at a popular, integrated literature was inaugurated by three early romantic leaders—the Croat Ljudevit Gaj (1809-72), the Slovene Jernej Kopitar (1780-1844), and the Serb Vuk Stefanović Karadžić . They developed a literary language based on popular speech. Karadžić was also a great folklorist; his collections helped stimulate the romantic-nationalist movement.
Benefiting from these beginnings, by mid-century the Serbian lyric poet Branko Radičević (1824-53), the Slovene poet and political satirist Stanko Vraz (1810-51), and the Croatian Ivan Mažuranić (1814-90)—whose epic The Death of Smail-Aga (1846, tr. 1918) tells of Christian-Muslim conflict in Turkish-ruled Herzegovina—had made important contributions to the movement. More technically perfect were the poems of France Prešeren (1800-1849), a disciple of Byron, and Petar Preradović , who cultivated medieval traditions. Considered far superior was the prince-bishop Petar Petrović Njegoš (1813-51), whose verse drama The Mountain Wreath (1847, tr. 1930) earned him the designation of the Montenegrin Shakespeare. Later romanticism is represented by Djura Jaksić (1832-78), writer of heroic, nationalistic dramas and poems, and Jovan Jovanović-Zmaj (1833-1903), a lyrical poet.
The Late Nineteenth Century: Realism and Psychological Interest
The rise of realism in the latter part of the 19th cent. furthered the development of the novel by such writers as the Serbs Simo Matavulj (1852-1908) and Jakov Ignatović (1824-88), whose penetrating studies portrayed the varied social classes of his region. Also important were the Croatian Evgenij Kumičić (1850-1904); and the Slovenes Josip Stritar (1836-1925) and Josip Jurcić (1844-81), both of whom portrayed Slovene society.
Many novelists of the period also wrote poetry and drama. Outstanding for versatility and abundant production were the popular Croatian writer August Šenoa (1838-81), who revealed Croat social decay and criticized German influence, and the greatest of all Slovenian writers, Ivan Cankar (1876-1918). The late 19th cent. also saw a growing interest in the psychology of motives and morals—a trend chiefly inspired by the writings of the Russian novelists Dostoyevsky and Tolstoy. The best known of the psychological novelists was the Croatian Ksaver Šandor Gjalski (1854-1935), who in a series of some 20 novels depicted the whole range of contemporary Croatian life.
In the drama, historical themes had predominated, as in the works of the Croatian Ivo Vojnović (1857-1929). In Croatia and in Slovenia dramatists broke with the cult of history and concerned themselves with psychology. Among these writers are the Croatians Milan Begović (1876-1948) and Josip Kosor and the Slovenian Anton Medved (1869-1911). Serbian drama, however, long remained primarily romantic in the manner of its founder Jovan Sterija-Popović (1806-56), although contemporary problems were treated in the comedies of Branislav Nusić (1864-1938), who was also a noted novelist, story writer, and essayist.
The Twentieth Century: A Variety of Literary Movements
During the first quarter of the 20th cent. the modernists sought to assimilate literary trends imported from France and Germany. Anton Aškerc (1856-1912) wrote historical poems of social revolt, while Vojislav Ilić (1862-94), Aleksa Santić (1868-1924), and Silvije Strahimir Kranjčević (1865-1908) were influenced by the Parnassians. The symbolists numbered not only the Serbs Jovan Dučić (1874-1943) and Milan Rakić (1876-1938), but also Oton Župančić (1878-1949), the greatest Slovene poet of this century, and Vladimir Nazor (1876-1949), Croatia's 20th-century literary giant. Outstanding critics were the Serbs Bogdan Popović (1863-1944) and Jovan Skerlić (1877-1914) and the Croatian Milan Marjanović (1879-1955).
During the 1930s socially conscious literature with local-color settings predominated. The Serbs Jovan Popović (1903-52) and Cedomir Minderović were among the more successful writers of this period. In Slovenia the epic novel flourished under such writers as Jus Kozak, Anton Ingolić, and Prezihov Voranc.
World War II produced a number of partisan poets, and war themes predominated in postwar writing. After 1944 when Macedonian was recognized as one of the official languages of Yugoslavia, writers sought to develop a literature based on Macedonia's rich folk heritage. Although the Communist regime imposed severe restrictions on writers, freedom from Soviet influence after 1949 and the cultural independence of several regions resulted in some innovation.
Among notable postwar writers have been Mladen Horvat; Marko Ristić; the Serbian poets Miloš Crnjanski and Rastko Petrović; the Macedonian poet Koca Racin; the Bosnian novelist and poet Ivo Andrić , who was awarded the 1961 Nobel Prize in Literature; the Croatian poet and dramatist Miroslav Krleža; the Slovenian prose writer France Bek; the fabulist Miodrag Bulatović; the political writer Milovan Djilas ; and the Serbian novelist Borislav Pekic. With the breakup of the Yugoslav federation in the early 1990s and the collapse of the effort (begun in 1918) to form a unified South Slavic nation, the differences between the major South Slavic literatures are likely to widen. Indeed, nationalists now speak of Bosnian, Croatian, and Serbian languages and have undertaken to "purify" them.
Bibliography
See A. Barac, A History of Yugoslav Literature (tr. 1955); S. Lukić, Contemporary Yugoslav Literature (1968, tr. 1972); anthologies edited by M. Matejic and D. Milivojevic (1978), T. Butler (1980), and C. Zlobec and H. Glusic (1980); E. Osers, tr., Contemporary Macedonian Poetry (1991).
Cite this article
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The Regicides and the Execution of Charles I.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: The Historian; 1/1/2004; ; 700+ words
; The Regicides and the Execution...Charles, a reluctant regicide, and a firm monarchist...the motives of the regicides. Scott focuses on the eight regicides from the north of...group for whom the regicide went too far, Presbyterian...
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Regicide and Restoration: English Tragicomedy, 1660-1671.
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly; 3/22/1995; ; 700+ words
; ...mode for combining the tragedy of the regicide with the comic ending of restoration...usurpation, tyranny, rebellion, and regicide. Dryden's The Indian Emperour, Tyrannick...account of literary and cultural change, Regicide and Restoration revitalizes the drama...
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Jason Peacey, ed. The Regicides and the Execution of Charles I.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Albion; 6/22/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...essays offers a timely reassessment of the regicide. As the editor points out, there has...the motivation of a group of northern regicides emphasizes the Scottish dimension. What...Charles and monarchy, but opposed the regicide and ended up apparently supporting some...
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The king is dead, long live the crown: on the anniversary of the regicide, Blair Worden considers the enduring and sometimes surprising consequences of the execution of Charles I.
Magazine article from: History Today; 2/1/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...lasting the condemnation of the regicide would be. Charles's death...and character. How had the regicide come about? The MPs who went...trial of the king. Yet the regicide was a huge risk. Not only...take the king's place. The regicides of 1649 had none. What were...
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Un regicide au nom de Dieu: L'assassinat d'Henri III, 1er aout 1589.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly; 3/22/2008; ; 700+ words
; Nicolas Le Roux. Un regicide au nom de Dieu: L'assassinat d'Henri III, 1er aout 1589. Les...assassination seven months later resulted in a crisis of legitimacy--a "regicide symbolique" (161)--and a reconfiguration of monarchical institutions...
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Imagining the King's Death: Figurative Treason, Fantasies of Regicide 1793-1796.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Criticism; 1/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...try to describe Barrell's new book. Framed by the actual regicide of Louis in France and the sedition trials in Edinburgh in...example the obvious psychoanalytic richness of the ever-present regicide theme, but he leaves these interpretive opportunities for...
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Brown will not go quietly, but the air is thick with plots of regicide
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 7/26/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...thick with rumours of backbench and cabinet-level plots of regicide, as what some have called the "Shakespearean tragedy" of...some thinking time. But they could well mount an attempt at regicide when they return, possibly even before the Labour conference...
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Regicide in Bucharest; Reflections on the revolution in Romania.
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 12/29/1989; ; 700+ words
; ...breaking a window. Nonetheless, it does not bode well for Romania's future that it should start its road to democracy this way. Revolutions that cannot resist regicide-the French and the Russian come to mind-have a way of ending badly.
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Manhattan regicide. (the Leona Helmsley tax fraud trial) (American Survey)
Magazine article from: The Economist (US); 7/1/1989; 700+ words
; Manhattan regicide THAT Mrs Leona Helmsley had drunk from a plastic cup and eaten off a plastic plate in the cafeteria of the Manhattan federal courthouse...
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US contemplates act of regicide
Newspaper article from: The Scotsman; 9/12/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...before them as awesome and traum-atic, they speak for the great mass of middle America. They know they are contemplating regicide. This is why it is still not inconceivable that the president may survive, and why for many Americans he deserves to survive...
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regicide
Book article from: The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable
regicide any of those who took part in the trial and execution of Charles I; after the Restoration , several of the regicides were tried and executed, and the bodies of Oliver Cromwell and others were dug up, drawn on a hurdle to Tyburn, displayed...
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regicides
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
regicides [Lat., =king-killers], in English history, name given to those judges and court officers...Bibliography: See C. V. Wedgwood, A Coffin for King Charles (1964); N. H. Mayfield, Puritans and Regicide (1988).
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Letters on a Regicide Peace
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
Letters on a Regicide Peace, see Regicide Peace .
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Regicide Peace, Letters on a
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
Regicide Peace, Letters on a, by E. Burke , the first two published 1796, the third 1797, the fourth posthumously in the collected...
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Tobias George Smollett
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...have his first play, an ill-starred tragedy entitled The Regicide, produced. Of the occasional odes that Smollett published...second abortive dramatic piece entitled Alceste. After The Regicide had been published in 1749, the cantankerous Smollett, in...
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