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Vladislav Petkovic Dis

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Name
  
Vladislav Dis

Died
  
May 16, 1917, Ionian Sea

Role
  
Poet

Books
  
Mozda spava, Nirvana

Vladislav Petkovic Dis Vladislav Petkovic Dis
Children
  
Gordana Petkovic, Mutimir Petkovic

Pijem vladislav petkovic dis stihove kazuje nitro


Vladislav Petkovic Dis (Serbian Cyrillic: Vladislav Petkoviћ Dis; born Vladislav Petkovic; 12 March 1880 – 16 May/29 May 1917) was a Serbian poet, part of the impressionism movement in European poetry, known as Moderna/Symbolism in Serbia. He was born in 1880 in Zablace, near Cacak in Serbia and died in 1917 on a boat on the Ionian Sea after being hit by a torpedo.

Contents

Biography

Vladislav Petkovic Dis httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Vladislav Petkovic was born in Zablace, a village near Cacak, in the Principality of Serbia. He made his way to Cacak, graduating from the Gymnasium and Teacher's College in 1902. He was appointed temporary teacher at Prlita, a village near the town of Zajecar. He did not like teaching, and his small output of poetry brought him little income. In 1903, he moved to Belgrade, and became prominent in the literary life there, when his poems appeared in Idila, a literary magazine.Vladislav Petkovic chose his appellation "Dis" as a repetition of the middle syllable of his first name, but also as the name of the Roman god of the underworld. He was a frequent evening visitor to the Belgrade's kafanas in Skadarlija and elsewhere where he would drink and compose new verse at the same time.

Vladislav Petkovic Dis Nirvana Vladislav Petkovi Dis Recitacija YouTube

He obtained an appointment as a customs official with the municipal government, giving him a good income and leisure time to write. He was named co-editor, with Sima Pandurovic, of Literary Weekend (Knjizevna nedelja). Both Petkovic-Dis and Pandurovic were considered the enfants terribles of their literary world (both being under the influence of Charles Baudelaire and other French Symbolists, like Santic, Ducic, Rakic, Corovic, and even Skerlic before he abandoned the movement). After the demise of the magazine, he married Hristina-Tinka, with whom he had two children, Gordana and Mutimir.

He wrote Spomenik (Monument) in anticipation of the Great War:

During the outbreak of the First Balkan War he was conscripted by the military as a journalist. He was the war correspondent covering battles of the Serbian Army in the First Balkan War (1912), Second Balkan War (1913), and the Great War that followed. In 1915 he joined the Serbian army in their retreat to Corfu.

From Corfu Petkovic-Dis was sent to France to recuperate and write about the entire tragedy. In 1917, on his way back, on either 16 May or 29 May (varying sources), he became a civilian war casualty after boarding an Italian ship, destined for Corfu. It was torpedoed and sunk by a German submarine in the Ionian Sea. He is said to have predicted his unfortunate destiny, for one of his most famous collections of poems is called Drowned Souls, earning him the reputation of a "cursed poet".He was 37 years old.

Poetry

His nickname Dis was derived from the three letters in the middle of his first name "Vla-DIS-lav". He introduced irrational and subconscious images into Serbian lyric poetry. Some of his most famous poems are Mozda spava (She May Be Sleeping) and Spomenik (Monument).

In Spomenik, Petkovic Dis dreamed of a monument:

Petkovic Dis was writing in 1913, just after Serbia wrested Kosovo from the Ottoman Empire and installed an obelisk on the site of the famous medieval battle when Kosovo was severed from Serbia by the Ottomans. Dis's poetry was not well received at the beginning by Jovan Skerlic, one of the most distinguished Serbian literary critics of that time, who did not care for the poems' morbid and sinister tone.

References

Vladislav Petkovic Dis Wikipedia