Isidora Sekulich ( Serb. Isidora Sekuliћ ; February 16, 1877 , Moshorin, (now the South Bachsky District , Voevodina ) - April 5, 1958 , Belgrade , (SFRY)) - Serbian Yugoslav writer , essayist , translator, literary critic. Ph.D. The first female academician of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts (1950) [2] . The most famous Serbian writer of the first half of the XX century.
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Biography
In 1892 she graduated from a teacher’s seminary in Budapest , worked as a teacher. In 1922, she received a doctorate in Germany.
She made several trips to Europe, for a long time she lived in England, France and Norway. Polyglot . She was fluent in several classic as well as nine modern languages.
Since February 1939 - corresponding member of the Serbian Royal Academy of Sciences. In 1950 she became the first female academician of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts .
Named among the 100 most famous Serbs. [3]
Creativity
I. Sekulich - master of lyric-associative prose. She wrote novels, collections of short stories and essays, travel essays, and memoirs. Author of critical articles and works in the field of music, theater, art, architecture, literature and philosophy. She conducted a number of studies of Yugoslav, Russian, English, German, French, Italian, Norwegian and other literature.
Critics wrote about Isidore Sekulich that only two or three women of such a culture would be found in all of Europe at that time.
The first woman in Serbia is a professional writer, translator from several European languages, an expert and admirer of Russian classics. A talented prose writer and essayist, at the beginning of her career, she suffered a lot from the male chauvinism of critics who accused her of excessive intellectualism and dry style. But in the last years of Isidor Sekulich’s life, Yugoslavia’s literary youth became the adored fragment of the old culture.
The most popular book of Sekulic is “Letters from Norway”, a product of insightful achievement in introspection and a brave stylistic experiment in which the writer wanted to create some ideal image of a small European country and its inhabitants, awarding them with those features that she so sought to educate in her compatriots.
Selected Works
- Saputnitsi (1913)
- Pisma from Norwegian (1914)
- From the past (1919)
- The Law to the Theotokos Church (1919)
- Chronicle of the Palanachkog grave (1940)
- Records (1941)
- Analysts of Trenuti and the topic, vols. 1-3 (1941)
- Records of the Moma to the People (1948)
- Њegoshu kњiga duboke of Odanage (1951)
- Conversation and hezik, Coulturn people's review
The name of Isidora Sekulic is the name of the prestigious Serbian literary prize.
Notes
- ↑ BNF ID : 2011 Open Data Platform .
- ↑ In 1876, Katarina Ivanovich became part of the Serbian Scientific Society, thus becoming the first female academician of Serbia.
- ↑ "100 Commemorative Servants." 1993. ( ISBN 978-86-82273-08-0 .)
Links
- Isidora Seculiћ (Serb.)