List Of Serbian Writers
This is a list of Serbian writers and poets from Serbia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Montenegro, and former Yugoslav republic Macedonia and diaspore. A *Ivo Andrić * Draginja Adamović *Ratko Adamović *Kosta Abrašević *Ratko Adamović * Mira Adanja Polak *Jasmina Ahmetagić * Dejan Ajdačić *Mirko Aksentijević *David Albahari *Mira Alečković *Princess Anka Obrenović *Dragutin Anastasijević *Mika Antić *Slobodan Antonić *Voja Antonić *Ljiljana Aranđelović *Ksenija Atanasijević * Sonja Atanasijević * Nataša Atanasković *Smilja Avramov *Dimitrije Avramović * Predrag Azdejković *Voja Antonić *Vladimir Arsenijević *Bogoboj Atanacković *Platon Atanacković *Jovan Avakumović B * Sava Babić * Dragan Babić *Vladislav Bajac *Đorđe Bajić (novelist) *Ljiljana Bakić * Ilija Bakić *Lujo Bakotić * Jelena Balšić Hranić *Danica Bandić *Anabela Basalo *Đorđe Balašević *Matija Ban *Svetislav Basara * Dušan Bataković *Radomir Belaćević *Aleksandar Belić *Alek ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
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Serbia
, image_flag = Flag of Serbia.svg , national_motto = , image_coat = Coat of arms of Serbia.svg , national_anthem = () , image_map = , map_caption = Location of Serbia (green) and the claimed but uncontrolled territory of Kosovo (light green) in Europe (dark grey) , image_map2 = , capital = Belgrade , coordinates = , largest_city = capital , official_languages = Serbian language, Serbian , ethnic_groups = , ethnic_groups_year = 2022 , religion = , religion_year = 2022 , demonym = Serbs, Serbian , government_type = Unitary parliamentary republic , leader_title1 = President of Serbia, President , leader_name1 = Aleksandar Vučić , leader_title2 = Prime Minister of Serbia, Prime Minister , leader_name2 = Đuro Macut , leader_title3 = Pres ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
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Voja Antonić
Vojislav "Voja" Antonić ( sr-cyr, Воја Антонић, ʾ, 12 July 1952) is a Serbian inventor, journalist, and writer. He is known for creating a build-it-yourself home computer Galaksija and originating a related "Build your own computer Galaksija" initiative with Dejan Ristanović. This initiative encouraged and enlightened thousands of computer enthusiasts during the 1980s in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Antonić has donated many of his personal creations to the public domain. He was also a magazine editor and contributed to a number of radio shows. Biography While in school, Voja Antonić found a passion for HAM radios. He obtained a licence and a callsign to broadcast his own waves. One day, the state police seized all CB Band units known to operate in the country, creating a new trend for HAM radio units which bored Voja Antonić who decided to move on towards new digital technologies. His first creation with a microprocessor was Conway's Game ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
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Dragan Babić
Dragan Babić (3 September 1937 – 23 July 2013) was a Serbian and Yugoslav journalist. He was born in Kruševac, Kingdom of Yugoslavia, and died in Vranje, Serbia , image_flag = Flag of Serbia.svg , national_motto = , image_coat = Coat of arms of Serbia.svg , national_anthem = () , image_map = , map_caption = Location of Serbia (gree .... His major works include the books ''Journey to the End of Language'' and ''You Maybe Think Different'', and the documentary ''Like a Soap Bubble''. He created several television shows including the children's show Dvogled ("Binoculars"). References 1937 births 2013 deaths Writers from Kruševac Serbian journalists Yugoslav journalists Serbian science fiction writers {{Serbia-writer-stub ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
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Sava Babić
Sava Babić (Cyrillic: Сaвa Бaбић, Palić, January 27, 1934–Beograd, November 23, 2012), was a Serbian writer, poet, translator and university professor. His life Sava Babić's parents arrived in Vojvodina from Hercegovina. From the autumn of 1941, he studied at a Hungarian school. He finished high school in Subotica. In 1953, he passed the school-leaving exam and studied Yugoslav literature at the University of Belgrade. He worked for several publishing houses and cultural institutions. Since 1974, he taught at the universities of Novi Sad, then Belgrade, where in 1993, he founded the Department of Hungarian Language and Literature and worked as its head till 1999, when he retired. In 2007, he received the Golden Cross of Merit of Hungary. Babić is also an honorary citizen of Balatonfüred. His first translation was a novel by [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
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Jovan Avakumović (poet)
Jovan Avakumović ( sr-cyr, Јован Авакумовић, – 1810), also known by his nickname Pašalija, was a Serbian poet, nobleman and lawyer. Life Jovan was born in 1748 into the prominent family of Nikola Avakumović, a merchant of Szentendre and judge whom Emperor Leopold II named a nobleman in charters. He was schooled in Bratislava, Trnava, Wien and Leipzig. He was a lawyer of the Temišvar Eparchy. As a poet he was famed in his time and known as a representative of the Serbian folk poetry of the 18th century, even if he only wrote a few poems which were part of handwritten poem books. In 1775 he composed song ''Pašalija'' (), later also recorded by Avram Miletić. Avakumović died in 1810. As a poet Avakumović came to hold definite theories of purposes and values of poetics and orthography, which he set forth in poems collected after his death in ''Pesme Jovana Avakumovića'' (Poems of Jovan Avakumović). Besides Dositej Obradović, he was among the first t ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
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Platon Atanacković
Platon Atanacković (Sombor, Vojvodina, Habsburg monarchy, 10 July 1788 – Novi Sad, Habsburg Monarchy, 21 April 1867) was a writer, linguist, patron of Serb culture, bishop of the Eparchy of Bačka and president of ''Matica srpska''. Born in the then Austro-Hungarian-occupied Vojvodina, he became the bishop of Bačka and promoted education among his people in the diaspora and the home country. With help of the German translation of Frédéric Eichhoff's works, he demonstrated the cognition of Sanskrit and Serbian (''Srodstvo slavenoserbskog jezika sa sanskritam'' or Affinity of Slavo-Serbian languages and Sanskrit, ''Letopis Matice srpske'', 1843). Platon's secular name was Pavle. He was involved in literature, politics and humanitarian work. He taught for 70 years as a professor in Szentendre, Hungary. In 1829, he became a monk in Krušedol Monastery, after his wife died. Soon, he was elevated to the ecclesiastical rank of abbot, and then Archimandrite. He became in 1839 bish ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
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Bogoboj Atanacković
Bogoboj Atanacković ( sr-cyr, Богобој Атанацковић; ; 10 June 1826 in Baja – 28 July 1858 in Baja) was a Serbian writer. Encouraged by the ideas of romanticism, he changed his name ''Timotej'' into ''Bogoboj'' for artistic reasons at the age of eighteen. Biography Atanacković was from a very respectable bourgeois family, where Serbian tradition was honoured scrupulously. He started school at an early age in his village. He attended high school at the Gymnasium of Karlovci before pursuing higher studies at the universities of the Hungarian and Austrian capitals. Atanacković resumed his law studies, which he had begun at universities in Budapest and in Vienna, where he frequented the circle of Serbian romanticists, followers of Vuk Karadžić; he was friends with Đuro Daničić and poet Branko Radičević. As a result of his participation in the Serbian Movement of 1848 and at the May Assembly in Sremski Karlovci, he was forced to flee to Vienna and late ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
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Vladimir Arsenijević
Vladimir Arsenijević ( sr-cyr, Владимир Арсенијевић, born 1965) is a Serbian novelist, columnist, translator, editor, musician, and publisher. He lives and works in Belgrade. Arsenijević won the prestigious NIN Award for the Yugoslavian novel of the year 1994 for his novel ''In the Hold'' (Serbian: ''U potpalublju''). Early life Arsenijević was born in Pula, SR Croatia, SFR Yugoslavia, and moved to Belgrade at a young age. In his early youth, Arsenijević (nicknamed Vlajsa) played with a punk band called " Urbana Gerila" as well as its post-punk offshoot "Berliner Strasse". After graduating high school and completing the mandatory military service in 1985, Arsenijević moved to London at the age of 20. He returned to Belgrade four years later in 1989. Writing career Novelist Arsenijević won the 1994 NIN Award in January 1995 for his first novel '' In the Hold'' (U potpalublju), thus at the age of 29 becoming the youngest ever recipient of the prestigious aw ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
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Predrag Azdejković
Predrag Azdejković (; born 15 July 1978) is a Serbian LGBT human rights activist, journalist, writer, film and theater producer. Azdejković is the director of Gay Lesbian Info Center, and was the director of Merlinka festival, until he was forced to resign after outrageous comments, offensive to the trans community, calling on social media for an elderly man who lost a testis due to police torture in Novi Sad to be sent to box against Imane Khelif, to which funders of the festival threatened to cancel funding, and the national TV station Radio Television of Serbia to an overseeeing body of which he had been appointed against the will of journalists working there has demanded he be removed from it, but this request has been ignored.https://www.danas.rs/vesti/drustvo/rts-osudjuje-i-ogradjuje-se-od-komentara-predraga-azdejkovica-na-drustvenoj-mrezi-iks-trazice-od-rem-a-da-ga-razresi/ He is also the editor in chief of Serbian only gay magazine ''Optimist'', producer of several shor ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
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Dimitrije Avramović
Dimitrije "Mita" Avramović (Serbian Cyrillic: Димитрије Мита Митриновић; 15 March 1815 – 1 March 1855) was a Serbian writer, iconographer, caricaturist and painter in the Neoclassical style, considered to be the preeminent painter of the era and best known for his iconostasis and frescos. Avramović also translated from German into Serbian Johann Joachim Winckelmann's ''Geschichte der Kunst des Alterthums'' ("The History of Art in Antiquity") and other writings. He is considered the father of modern comic strips in Serbia. His caricatures were used to fight against the authoritarian rule of the masses in both the Austrian Empire and the Ottoman Empire at the time. Biography He was born in Šajkaš, where he, as a boy, moved with his family to Novi Sad where he started schooling. In 1833 he went to Vienna for the first time, then again in 1835. He studied painting in Vienna privately with Friedrich Amerling, and then in 1836 to 1839 he was enrolled at ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
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Smilja Avramov
Smilja Avramov ( sr-Cyrl, Смиља Аврамов; 15 February 1918 – 2 October 2018) was a Serbian academic, legal scholar, social activist and educator in international law. She was a member of the Senate of Republika Srpska from 1996 to 2009. Before she retired she was a Professor of International law at the Law Faculty at Belgrade University. Education and career Avramov finished high school in Sušak, Rijeka, Kingdom of Yugoslavia, in 1936. She was maternally related to Petar Preradović and Pavle Solarić. During World War II in Yugoslavia, eleven members of her family were murdered at Jasenovac concentration camp. She graduated in the Zagreb Law Faculty in 1947. She received her master's degree in London and a PhD in Belgrade in 1950. She also studied at the Vienna, Harvard and Columbia Universities. Since 1949 until her retirement, Avramov worked as an assistant and a professor at the Belgrade Faculty of Law where she was also head of the Department for Inte ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
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Nataša Atanasković
Nataša Atanasković ( Serbian-Cyrillic: Наташа Атанасковић; born 1972 in Belgrade, Yugoslavia) is a Serbian painter, conservator-restorer and writer. Biography Atanasković studied mural painting (frescos, icons) at the Academy for art and conservation of the Serbian Orthodox Church. She has participated in religious-artistic designing of several Orthodox churches in Serbia and Republika Srpska for recent decades. In 1997, she was staff of conservator team, which had renovated the murals of St. Michael's Cathedral, supported by ''Republic Institute for the Protection of Monuments of Cultural Heritage''. She participated with some of her works at the exhibition ''Orthodox Symphony 1997'' in the Residence of Princess Ljubica, and an exhibition of her portraits of 20th-century painters entitled ''Modern Art - Questions and Answers'' was shown in the Phoenix Gallery Belgrade (Feniks Galerija) in 2012. In addition to her work as visual artist, she has written fo ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |