Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Meša Selimović

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Name
  
Mesa Selimovic

Language
  
Serbo-Croatian

Role
  
Writer


Nationality
  
Yugoslav

Education
  
Great School

Awards
  
NIN Award

Mesa Selimovic wwwbosnjacinetfotomesaselimovic6jpg

Born
  
26 April 1910 Tuzla, Condominium of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Austro-Hungarian Empire (
1910-04-26
)

Occupation
  
Writer, professor, art director

Notable works
  
Death and the Dervish (1966)

Died
  
July 11, 1982, Belgrade, Serbia

Books
  
Death and the Dervish, The fortress, The island

Siblings
  
Sefkija Selimovic, Teufik Selimovic

Parents
  
Alija Selimovic, Pasa Selimovic

Resting place
  
Novo groblje, Belgrade

Alma mater
  
University of Belgrade

Nedjeljna lektira: Derviš i smrt (Meša Selimović)


Mehmed "Meša" Selimović ([mɛ̌xmɛd mɛ̌ːʃa sɛlǐːmɔʋitɕ]; Serbian Cyrillic: Мехмед "Меша" Селимовић; 26 April 1910 – 11 July 1982) was a Yugoslav writer. His novel Death and the Dervish is one of the most important literary works in post-World War II Yugoslavia. Some of the main themes in his works are the relations between individuality and authority, life and death, and other existential problems.

Contents

Meša Selimović Mesa Selimovic Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

Nedjeljna lektira tvr ava me a selimovi


Biography

Meša Selimović Koga je voleo pisac Mea Selimovi Ko promai ljubav promaio je

Selimović was born to a prominent Bosnian Muslim family on 26 April 1910 in Tuzla (present-day Bosnia and Herzegovina), where he graduated from elementary school and high school. In 1930, he enrolled to study the Serbo-Croatian language and literature at the University of Belgrade Faculty of Philology and graduated in 1934. In 1936, he returned to Tuzla to teach in the gymnasium that today bears his name. He spent the first two years of World War II in the hometown Tuzla, where he was arrested for participation in the Partisan anti-fascist resistance movement in 1943. After the release, he moved to the liberated territory, became a member of Communist Party of Yugoslavia and the political commissar of Tuzla Detachment of the Partisans. During the war, Selimović's brother, also a communist, was executed by partisans' firing squad for alleged theft, without trial; Selimović's letter in defense of the brother was to no avail. That episode apparently affected Meša's later contemplative introduction to Death and the Dervish, where the main protagonist Ahmed Nurudin fails to rescue his imprisoned brother.

Meša Selimović Mea Selimovi citati misli izreke Saznaj Lako

After the war, he briefly resided in Belgrade, and in 1947 he moved to Sarajevo, where he was the professor of High School of Pedagogy and Faculty of Philology, art director of Bosna Film, chief of the drama section of the National Theater, and chief editor of the publishing house Svjetlost. Exasperated by a latent conflict with several local politicians and intellectuals, in 1971 he moved to Belgrade, where he lived until his death in 1982. In his 1976 letter to the Serbian Academy of Science and Arts, Selimović argued that despite his Muslim roots (he was a descendant of a notable bey family) he regarded himself as a Serb and a Serb writer. In his autobiography, Sjećanja, Selimović claims his paternal ancestry as Orthodox, of the Vujović brotherhood of Drobnjak, his ancestor having converted to Islam in the 17th century.

Selimović was a member of Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts.

Works

Meša Selimović httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Selimović began writing fairly late in his life. His first book, a collection of short stories Prva četa (The First Company) was published in 1950 when he was forty. His subsequent work, Tišine (Silences) was published eleven years later in 1961. The following books Tuđa zemlja (Foreign land, 1962) and Magla i mjesečina (Mist and Moonlight, 1965) did not receive widespread recognition either.

Meša Selimović Mea Selimovi Citati i izreke Edukacija

However, his novel Death and the Dervish (Derviš i smrt, 1966) was widely received as a masterpiece. The plot of the novel took place in 18th-century Sarajevo under Ottoman rule, and reflected Selimović's own torment of the execution of his brother; the story speaks of the futility of one man's resistance against a repressive system, and the change that takes place within that man after he becomes a part of that very system. Some critics have likened this novel to Kafka's The Trial. It has been translated into numerous languages. Each chapter of the novel opens with a Qur'an citation, the first being: "In the name of God, the most compassionate, the most merciful."

The next novel, Tvrđava (The Fortress, 1970), placed still further in the past, is slightly more optimistic, and fulfilled with faith in love, unlike the lonely contemplations and fear in Death and the Dervish. The Fortress and Death and the Dervish are the only novels of Selimović that have thus far been translated into English. Subsequent novels Ostrvo (The Island, 1974) and posthumously published Krug (The Circle, 1983), have not been translated into English.

He also wrote a book about Vuk Karadžić's orthographic reforms, an elderly couple facing aging and eventual death on a Dalmatian island, as well as his autobiography, Sjećanja.

References

Meša Selimović Wikipedia