Dinko Šimunović
Dinko Šimunović (1 September 1873 – 3 August 1933) was a Croatian writer.
Dinko Šimunović | |
---|---|
Born | Knin, Dalmatia, Austria-Hungary (now Knin, Croatia) | 1 September 1873
Died | 3 August 1933 59) Zagreb, Yugoslavia (now Zagreb, Croatia) | (aged
Occupation | Teacher |
Language | Croatian |
Genre | Realism, impressionism |
Dinko Šimunović was born in Knin. He spent almost two decades as a teacher in villages of the Zagora, the hinterland of Dalmatia. He retired in 1927 and moved to Zagreb in 1929, where he died in 1933.
Šimunović wrote many stories and two novels, all dealing with people from his native region. His contemporaries described his works as championing a patriarchal, hierarchical, black-and-white world, an impression further reinforced by author's personal distaste towards the modern, urban way of living.[1]
Works
- "Mrkodol" (1909)
- "Đerdan" (1914)
- "Mladost" (The Youth, 1921)
- "Alkar" (The Knight, 1908)
- "Tuđinac" (The Foreigner, 1911)
- "Porodica Vinčić" (Vinčić Family, 1923)
- "Duga" (The Rainbow, 1907)
Alkar was translated to Chinese language and published in Shanghai in 1936.[2]
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References
- Durić 2013, p. 260.
- "Sto godina esperanta u Zagrebu". Vijenac (in Croatian). No. 385. 4 December 2008. Retrieved 23 November 2018.
Bibliography
- Durić, Dejan (March 2013). "Patrijarhat, rod i pripovijetke Dinka Šimunovića" [Patriarchy, Gender And Stories By Dinko Šimunović] (PDF). Croatica et Slavica Iadertina (in Croatian). 8/1 (8): 259–276. Retrieved 23 November 2018.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
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