Dobriša Cesarić
Dobriša Cesarić | |
---|---|
Born | (1902-01-10)10 January 1902[1] Požega, Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia, Austria-Hungary (now Požega, Croatia)[1] |
Died | 18 December 1980(1980-12-18) (aged 78) Zagreb, SR Croatia, SFR Yugoslavia (now Zagreb, Croatia) |
Occupation | poet, writer, translator |
Language | Croatian |
Period | 1916–1970 |
Literary movement | Modernism |
Dobriša Cesarić (Croatian pronunciation: [ˈdobriʃa ˈt͡sěsarit͡ɕ]; 10 January 1902 – 18 December 1980) was a Croatian poet and translator. He is considered one of the greatest Croatian poets of the 20th century.[2][full citation needed][3][full citation needed] In 1951, he became a member of the Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts.[1]
Literary work
His first appearance on the literary scene was when he was 14 years old, with the poem I ja ljubim ("I Love Too") published in a youth magazine Pobratim ("Blood Brother").[citation needed] His poetic oeuvre consists of ten collections of poems and a few translations.
Work as a translator
He translated from German, Russian, Italian, Bulgarian and Hungarian to Croatian.[citation needed]
Works
- Lirika, Zagreb, 1931.
- Spasena svjetla, Zagreb, 1938.
- Izabrani stihovi, Zagreb, 1942.
- Pjesme (Voćka poslije kiše), Zagreb, 1951.
- Knjiga prepjeva, Zagreb 1951.
- Osvijetljeni put, Zagreb, 1953.
- Tri pjesme, Zagreb, 1955.
- Goli časovi, Novi Sad, 1956.
- Proljeće koje nije moje, Zagreb, 1957.
- Izabrane pjesme, Zagreb, 1960.
- Poezija, Skopje, 1965.
- Moj prijatelju mene više nema., Zagreb, 1966.
- Slap, izabrane pjesme, Zagreb, 1970.
- Svjetla za daljine, Belgrade, 1975.
- Izabrana lirika, Belgrade, 1975.
- Izabrane pjesme i prepjevi, Sarajevo, 1975.
- Pjesme. Memoarska proza, Zagreb, 1976 (Pet stoljeća hrvatske književnosti, book 113).
- Voćka poslije kiše, Zagreb, 1978.
- Published posthumously
- Spasena svjetla, Zagreb, 1985.
- Srebrna zrnca u pjesniku, Zagreb, 1985.
- Balada iz predgrađa, Zagreb, 1992.
- Povratak, Zagreb, 1995.
- Kadikad, Zagreb, 1997.
- Dobriša Cesarić. Pjesme., ABC naklada, Zagreb, 2007.
- Izabrana djela, Matica hrvatska, Zagreb, 2008.
References
- ^ a b c Draško Ređep (1971). Živan Milisavac (ed.). Jugoslovenski književni leksikon [Yugoslav Literary Lexicon] (in Serbo-Croatian). Novi Sad (SAP Vojvodina, SR Serbia): Matica srpska. p. 62-63.
- ^ "article title". Vjesnik (in Croatian). 11 January 2002. p. 13.
- ^ [1] (in Croatian)
External links
- Umro Dobriša Cesarić (in Croatian)
- Jozo Puljizević (Summer 2002). "Zbunjeno srce". Kolo (in Croatian) (2). Archived from the original on 22 June 2009.
- Dobriša Cesarić lyrics (in Croatian)
- Translated works by Dobriša Cesarić (in English)
- v
- t
- e
- Miroslav Krleža (1962)
- Vjekoslav Kaleb (1967)
- Dragutin Tadijanović (1967)
- Dobriša Cesarić (1968)
- Gustav Krklec (1968)
- Vjekoslav Majer (1969)
- Nikola Šop (1970)
- Miroslav Feldman (1971)
- Šime Vučetić (1972)
- Novak Simić (1973)
- Marijan Matković (1974)
- Ranko Marinković (1975)
- Vladimir Popović (1976)
- Drago Ivanišević (1977)
- Joža Horvat (1978)
- Marin Franičević (1979)
- Josip Barković (1980)
- Vesna Parun (1982)
- Jure Franičević-Pločar (1983)
- Aleksandar Flaker (1984)
- Jure Kaštelan (1984)
- Mirko Božić (1985)
- Vojin Jelić (1986)
- Živko Jeličić (1987)
- Ivan Slamnig (1988)
- Slobodan Novak (1989)
- Olinko Delorko (1990)
- Petar Šegedin (1991)
- Ivo Frangeš (1992)
- Srećko Diana (1993)
- Nikola Miličević (1994)
- Rajmund Kupareo (1995)
- Slavko Mihalić (1996)
- Ivan Kušan (1997)
- Miroslav Slavko Mađer (1998)
- Vesna Krmpotić (1999)
- Stanko Lasić (2000)
- Ivo Brešan (2001)
- Gajo Peleš (2002)
- Viktor Žmegač (2003)
- Josip Tabak (2004)
- Irena Vrkljan (2005)
- Miroslav Šicel (2006)
- Nedjeljko Fabrio (2007)
- Zvonimir Mrkonjić (2008)
- Milivoj Solar (2009)
- Ivan Aralica (2010)
- Nikica Petrak (2011)
- Luko Paljetak (2012)
- Tonko Maroević (2013)
- Zvonimir Majdak (2014)
- Pavao Pavličić (2015)
- Dubravko Jelčić (2016)
- Feđa Šehović (2017)
Danijel Dragojević(2018)- Andriana Škunca (2019)
- Dubravka Oraić-Tolić (2020)
- Hrvoje Hitrec (2021)
This article about a Croatian poet is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e
This article about a translator from Europe is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e