Slobodan Novak
Slobodan Novak | |
---|---|
Born |
Ante Slobodan Novak 3 November 1924 Split, Kingdom of Yugoslavia |
Died | 25 July 2016 91) | (aged
Nationality | Croatian |
Alma mater | University of Zagreb |
Genre | Narrative novels |
Notable awards |
Vladimir Nazor Award Order of Duke Trpimir Order of Danica Hrvatska with character of Marko Marulić |
Ante Slobodan Novak (3 November 1924 – 25 July 2016) was a Croatian writer and novelist.[1] He is best known for his existentialist novel Gold, Frankincense and Myrrh (1968), often listed as one of the best Croatian novels of the 20th century.[2]
Biography
Novak was born in Split on 3 November 1924 to Duje and Marija (née Smoje) Novak. He was baptized in the local church as Ante Slobodan Novak. He finished elementary school in Rab, attended gymnasium in Split, then graduated in Sušak. During World War II he joined the Yugoslav Partisans, which he described in his autobiographical essays Digresije and Protimbe (2003).
He then attended the University of Zagreb and earned a degree in Croatian language and Yugoslav literature in 1953. He worked as lector and concealer and playwright in Croatian National Theatre in Split. Later he worked as a journalist and editor in publishing houses. In 1983 he became a member of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts. On 27 July 1999, Novak was declared Honorary Citizen of Rab.
Literary work
He started his career with songs full of painful memories from the war. Verses were gathered in his work Glasnice u oluji (English: Vocal Cords in a Storm) (1950). Soon he started to write fiction: he published Krugovima (English: Circles) and Republici (English: Republic). He gained the attention of critics and public by publishing his autobiographical novel Izgubljeni zavičaj (English: Lost homeland) (1955), in which he dealt with his childhood on a lonely island.
The narrator appears in two characters: in infantile “I” where he observes, registers and absorbs everything around him; and the second character as today's “I” where he, with a sentimental and quiet dose of resignation recreates his memories and images from youth. His novel Mirisi, zlato i tamjan (English: Gold, Frankincense and Myrrh) was published in 1968. This is a story about retired middle-aged intellectual who lives with his wife on an isolated island; he lives his life and nurtures the very old Madona Markantunova, a former rich patrician woman and owner of half of the island. The story takes place in the 1960s. Novak follows the same thematic and poetic line in his short novel Izvanbrodski dnevnik (English: Outboard Diary) published in 1977.
Later, Novak published a collection of interviews with Jelena Hekman in Digresije (English: Digressions) in 2001. He later published Protimbe (English: Dissent) (2003) which he considered as an expansion of Digresije. Protimbe is one of the greatest works of Croatian autobiographical prose, rich with reminiscences and associations on youth, political and social life in SFR Yugoslavia, on the writer's experiences during the Croatian War of Independence, and on subsequent changes politically and socially.
Works
In Croatian | In English | Publication |
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Awards and decorations
Awards
Award | Awarded for | Year of reception |
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Decorations
Decoration | Image |
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References
- ↑ "PREMINUO SLOBODAN NOVAK Odlazak pisca kultnog hrvatskog romana 'Mirisi, zlato i tamjan'". jutarnji.hr. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
- ↑ Visković 2006, p. 394.
Sources
- (Croatian) HAZU - Biography
- Visković, Velimir (April 2006). "Inzularnost kao metafora i zbilja". Dani Hvarskoga kazališta (in Croatian). 32 (1): 394–407. Retrieved 27 November 2016.