
Tri drame: U logoru / Vučjak / Golgota
The collection *Three Dramas* brings together three of Krleža's key dramatic texts. Through political conflicts, moral breakdowns, and criticism of social structures, Krleža portrays an individual trapped between ideals, opportunism, and historical upheav
In the Camp is a short, tense drama set in the military environment of Austria-Hungary during World War I. The focus is on chaos, hierarchy, and the breakdown of humanity in a closed military system, where fear, disorientation, and authority are more important than the reality on the battlefield. The atmosphere is claustrophobic, and the conflicts between the characters expose the fragility of the institutions that govern human lives.
Vučjak follows the failed intellectual Krešimir Horvat, who after political and personal failures flees to the provinces, believing that he will find meaning and peace there. Instead, he encounters moral devastation, violence, and primitivism that destroy his illusions. The drama depicts the collision of idealism and brutal reality, and the slow disintegration of a man who cannot find his place in a world of compromise and lies.
Golgotha is a drama about revolutionary enthusiasm and its tragic price. The plot follows a group of left-wing intellectuals who, in the midst of historical upheaval, try to combine political ideals with personal morality. At the center are dilemmas of loyalty, betrayal, and sacrifice, as the characters grapple with their own fears and the consequences of fighting for a more just world.
Together, these three plays create a stark portrayal of a society on the edge — of distorted power structures, lost individuals, and the constant struggle between belief and reality.
One copy is available





