Na rubu pameti

Na rubu pameti

Miroslav Krleža

This is Krleža's only novel written in the first person, the so-called. "Ich-Form" and its content reveal Krleža's idealism. In the novel, through the voice of his nameless hero, Krleža speaks ironically and sarcastically about human stupidity.

Doctor of Law, 52 years old, seems to lead an ordinary civil life, has a family, was a soldier in the First World War. Looking at a group of people with masks opens his eyes - all people are just expressionless masks, pretending to be someone else, and human stupidity is like living oranism, it spreads and becomes a general law that everyone obeys. Although he rebels against such social consciousness, it only brings him more trouble and even imprisonment.

Dimensions
20 x 13 cm
Pages
238
Publisher
Novi Liber, Zagreb, 2013.
 
Latin alphabet. Hardcover.
Language: Croatian.
ISBN
978-9-53325-024-3

No copies available

The last copy was sold recently.

 

Are you interested in another book? You can search the offer using our search engine or browse books by category.

You may also be interested in these titles

Izabrane pjesme

Izabrane pjesme

Miroslav Krleža
Matica hrvatska, 1963.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover with dust jacket.
9.997.99
Na rubu pameti

Na rubu pameti

Miroslav Krleža
Jutarnji list, 2004.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover with dust jacket.
3.99
Povratak Filipa Latinovicza

Povratak Filipa Latinovicza

Miroslav Krleža

The Return of Filip Latinovicz is one of Miroslav Krleža's most famous novels. This novel is significant in our literature because it is considered the first fully modern Croatian novel.

Večernji list, 2004.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover with dust jacket.
5.52 - 5.56
Calypso

Calypso

Ognjen Spahić

Zgusnut, bez prekida, bez dijaloga, u jednom poglavlju, majstor­ski ispisan, minuciozno stvoren, Calypso je tour de force Ognjena Spahića.

Fraktura, 2017.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover with dust jacket.
9.347.47
Tonio Kreger, Smrt u Veneciji

Tonio Kreger, Smrt u Veneciji

Thomas Mann
Rad, 1965.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
2.98
Čičikovljeve pustolovine ili Mrtve duše

Čičikovljeve pustolovine ili Mrtve duše

Nikolaj Vasiljevič Gogolj

The novel "Dead Souls" was originally conceived as a poem in 3 parts, based on Dante's Divine Comedy divided into three parts: hell, purgatory and paradise, but he wrote only one, published in 1842, and 5 fragments of the second part.

Naprijed, 1960.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover with dust jacket.
6.32