Awarded monograph on Kosovel's relation to the European and Russian constructivism.
COBISS.SI-ID: 276590592
A monograph seeks to rehabilitate tragedy as a literary genre reflecting the fate of the human beings since the beggining of literature.
COBISS.SI-ID: 1537278916
The monograph deals with the impact of Klement Jug on the life and work of Vladimir Bartol.
COBISS.SI-ID: 284597760
The article looks at the narration of ethnocide through a comparative reading of two contemporary Bosnian novels (Ključanin's Pričevalec and Karahasan's Nočni shod) about the Bosnian War (1992-1995) against the historical and literary backdrop of other selected novels that thematize nationalisms in the Yugoslav Wars and their effects. The comparison reveals recourse to testimonial discourse and the attendant use of "non-mimetic" narrative strategies of temporality ("circular," "melded") as a common narrative strategy. These are attended, moreover, by the specific treatment of the motif and theme of "the spectre," which evokes the Islamic religious context and the cultural-historical embeddedness of the narrative and which at the same time facilitates the intrusion of the fantastic or even a reading in the magical realist code.
COBISS.SI-ID: 61023842
This article examines the validity of Brian Boyd's thesis that "evocriticism" represents a break with twentieth-century theory. The article analyzes evocriticism and its theoretical hypotheses. It then proceeds to a critical evaluation of the evocritical interpretative method. The key thesis of the article is that Boyd's evocriticism cannot be regarded as a break with literary theory or with methodological pluralism. Its claims for universalism contradict the assumption on the end of "grand narratives"; moreover, evocriticism itself can be seen as an attempt to construct such a narrative.
COBISS.SI-ID: 63093090