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Jože Snoj

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Literary movement
  
Role
  
Poet


Name
  
Joze Snoj

Children
  
Vid Snoj

Books
  
The dream mouse

Joze Snoj wwwdelosiassetsmediapicture20120203snojvuk

Born
  
March 17, 1934 (age 90) Maribor, Drava Banovina, Kingdom of Yugoslavia (now in Slovenia) (
1934-03-17
)

Notable works
  
Negativ Gojka Mrca, Poslikava notranjscine, Kazipoti brezpotij, Med besedo in Bogom

Notable awards
  
Rozanc Award1994 for Med besedo in bogomJenko Award2004 for Poslikava notranjscineVeronika Award2009 for Kazipoti brezpotijPreseren Award2012 for his lifetime work and his rich literary opus

Awards
  
Preseren Award, Preseren Fund Award

Similar People
  
Dane Zajc, Edvard Kocbek, Josip Murn, France Balantic, Paul Claudel

Occupation
  
Poet, Writer, Essayist

Jože Snoj (born March 17, 1934) is a Slovenian poet, novelist, journalist and essayist. He has been awarded the 2012 Prešeren Award for his lifetime work and rich literary opus.

Jože Snoj Joe Snoj Wikiwand

He was born in Maribor, then part of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, into a wealthy Slovene family. His uncle, Franc Snoj, was a prominent member of the Slovene People's Party and a minister in the Royal Yugoslav Government. In April 1941, after the invasion of Yugoslavia he escaped with his family from the Nazis to the Italian-occupied Lower Carniola. From there, the family had to flee again to Ljubljana in order to escape persecution by the Communist-led partisan movement. In 1947, his uncle Franc Snoj was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment in a staged trial together with other liberal and social democrats who tried to organize a legal opposition to Josip Broz Tito's Communist regime (the so-called Nagode's trial). These experiences deeply influenced Jože Snoj's his later literary opus.

After graduation in Slavic philology at the University of Ljubljana he started working as a reporter for the newspaper Delo. Together with Dane Zajc, Gregor Strniša, Dominik Smole, Marjan Rožanc, and others, he was part of the generation which, influenced by the "modernist turn" of the poet Edvard Kocbek, strongly challenged the literary canon established by the Communist regime. In 1963 he published his first collection of poetry, Mlin stooki ("The Mill with Hundred Eyes"), which was strongly criticised by the literary establishment for its supposedly decadent and nihilist content. Snoj later moved closer to Catholicism, expressing religious and metaphysical preoccupations in works as Žalostinka za očetom in očetnjavo ("Elegies for Father and Fatherland") and Duhovne pesmi ("Spiritual Poems"). Among his novels, the most famous are Gavženhrib ("Gallows Hill"), an autobiographical novel about his war childhood, in which he explores the sources of evil, and Jožef ali zgodnje odkrivanje srčnega raka ("Joseph or the Early Revelation of the Heart Cancer"), in which he used the ancient archetypal figure of Joseph in a magical realist setting, in which modern and archaic intermingle.

References

Jože Snoj Wikipedia