Svetislav Vulović

Svetislav Vulović (29 November 1847 - 3 May 1898) was a Serbian writer, pedagogue, and literary critic.[1]

Svetislav Vulović
Born(1847-11-29)29 November 1847
Died3 May 1898(1898-05-03) (aged 50)
Occupationwriter, pedagogue, and literary criticr

Biography

Svetislav Vulović was born in Ivanjica in Serbia on 29 November 1847. He completed his elementary education in Ivanjica, grade school gymnasium in Kraljevo and Belgrade and university at the Faculty of Law of the Grandes écoles also in Belgrade in 1868.[2]He served for some time in a Belgrade Municipal Court House. In 1870 he started teaching at a Belgrade gymnasium. He participated in the 1876-1878 war against the Turks. He resumed his teaching after the war until 1881 when he was offered the post of professor of Serbian Literature at his alma mater -- Grandes écoles (soon to be accredited as the University of Belgrade). On joining the university he tried to make a living in literature. It was there that he began the preparation of numerous valuable tracts on the history of Serbian literature during the middle ages to the present day,[3] and of dissertations and discussions on points of literary interest, as well as the publication of his various philosophical, legal poetical and other works absorbed the greater part of his time. These brought him into communication with the most distinguished scholars and literary critics of Europe and Russia.

In 1886 Vulović was elected to the Serbian Royal Academy with 15 other academicians. Together they began writing textbooks, primers, and readers for all grades in different disciplines.

He was under the influence of French literary critic Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve and German political and literary writer Ludwig Börne.

Works

  • Đura Jakšić, poet and painter (1875),
  • Art narrative in the latest Serbian literature (1880),
  • From the old Serbian literature I (1885),
  • Njegoš, Serbian poet (1887),
  • Branko Radičević I - II (1889, 1890),[4]
  • Srpske čitanke (1874, 1875), excellent anthologies of Serbian literature from which literary education was acquired by several generations,
  • Beleške o arhiepiskopu Nikodimu (Notes on Archbishop Nikodim Milaš, 1894).[5]

References

  1. "Revue d'histoire du théâtre". Société d'histoire du théâtre. November 19, 1959 via Google Books.
  2. "Biografija: Svetislav Vulović - osnivač književne kritike". Opusteno.rs.
  3. Moravcevich, Nicholas (November 19, 2005). "Selected essays on Serbian and Russian works of literature and history". Stubovi kulture via Google Books.
  4. Vulović, Svetislav (November 19, 1890). "Бранко Радичевић: прилог историји нове српске књижевности". u kralj. srpskoj državnoj štampariji via Google Books.
  5. Vulović, Svetislav (November 19, 1894). "Белешке о архиепископу Никодиму". štampano u kralj. srpskoj državnoj štampariji via Google Books.
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