[go: up one dir, main page]

Jump to content

Stevan Sremac

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Stevan Sremac
Стеван Сремац
Born11 November 1855
Senta, Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar, Austrian Empire
Died13 August 1906(1906-08-13) (aged 50)
Sokobanja, Kingdom of Serbia
Occupationwriter
NationalitySerbian
Literary movementRealism

Stevan Sremac (Serbian Cyrillic: Стеван Сремац, pronounced [stɛ̌vaːn srɛ̌ːmats]; 11 November 1855 – 13 August 1906) was a Serbian realist and comedy writer. He is considered one of the best truly humorous Serbian writers.

Biography

[edit]
Stevan Sremac on a 2005 Serbian stamp

Stevan Sremac was born in Senta in Bačka region (then part of the Austrian Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar) on 11 November 1855. [1] He spent his early childhood in the city of his birth, and moved to Belgrade to study after his parents died. While still a university student, he joined the Serbian Army and participated in the 1876 and 1877–1878 wars as a volunteer. In 1878 he graduated from Belgrade's Grande École (Velika škola) in philosophy and history. He became a teacher, working in this profession for the rest of his life—in the southern Serbia's cities of Pirot, Niš and Belgrade.[1] His personal relations with his pupils were of singularly close and affectionate nature, and the charm of his social gifts and genial character won him friends on all sides. His literary reputation was established relatively late, in 1890, with novelized chronicles of events and personages from Serbian history. These weren't published until 1903 under title Iz knjiga starostavnih ("From Ancient Books").[citation needed]

In political sense, he was an activist of Liberal party (Serbia), which was pretty conservative with strong nationalist sentiments and supported the rule of the Obrenović dynasty. In 1906 he became a member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts.[1]

Sremac died accidentally of blood poisoning in Sokobanja on 12 August 1906.[1]

Literary work

[edit]

Sremac's period spent in Niš was his most productive period. During this period, he published Božićna pečenica (1893), Ivkova slava (1895), Vukadin (1903), Limunacija na selu (1896), Pop Ćira i pop Spira (1898), Čiča Jordan (1903), and Zona Zamfirova (1906), all characterized with local colouring, realism, humour, and satire. Because of their high dramatic quality, many of these were later dramatized, with Ivkova slava, being the most successful. Sremac's characters are usually small merchants, clerks, priests, artists, and just simple folk in small Serbian towns. A realist and sharp observer, he was able to point out the changes sweeping Serbian society into a new era. Some of his stories dealing with vanishing way of life that had persisted for centuries have an unforegetable nostalgic flavor. His depiction of the patriarchal atmosphere of Serbia of his time is done in a humorous vain, but never mockingly, except when he ridicules his political opponents. Sremac's short stories reveal his love for the slowly disappearing "old way" of life. The plots are placed in his native Vojvodina, Bačka in particular, Belgrade, and mostly, southern parts of Serbia. But it is his humor for which Sremac is best known and remembered.

Legacy

[edit]
Furniture and personal belongings of Stevan Sremac and his wife, The City Museum of Niš

Many of his works were turned into films; his most popular novel Pop Ćira i pop Spira was made into TV series in 1980s, while feature films Zona Zamfirova (2002) and Ivkova slava (2005), both by director Zdravko Šotra saw huge success in Serbia and Montenegro.

He is included in The 100 most prominent Serbs.

Selected works

[edit]
  • Božićna pečenica (Christmas Roast) (1893)
  • Ivkova slava (Ivko's slava) (1895)
  • Limunacija na selu (Illemonation in the Village) (1896)
  • Pop Ćira i pop Spira (Priest Ćira and Priest Spira) (1898)
  • Iz knjiga starostavnih (From Ancient Books) (1903—1909).
  • Vukadin (1903)
  • Čiča Jordan (Uncle Yordan) (1903)
  • Zona Zamfirova (1906)

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d Boško Novaković (1971). Živan Milisavac (ed.). Jugoslovenski književni leksikon [Yugoslav Literary Lexicon] (in Serbo-Croatian). Novi Sad (SAP Vojvodina, SR Serbia): Matica srpska. p. 498-499.