
Pavao Šegota
Pavao Šegota, a gifted young man from a poor Podgora region, goes to study in Prague. The novel follows his struggle with his new surroundings, love, poverty and disappointments. A realistic portrayal of the ruin of talent in a foreign land.
Pavao Šegota (1888) is the first novel by Vjenceslav Novak and one of the most significant works of early Croatian realism. In the Minerva edition edited by Slavko Ježić (the first volume of Collected Works), the novel brings a powerful, autobiographically colored story about a young provincial who goes to study in Prague.
The talented and idealistic Pavao Šegota comes from the poor hinterland of Senj, full of desire for knowledge and a better future. In the Prague student environment, he faces a completely different world – inns, national enthusiasm, love temptations, poverty and moral decline. Novak masterfully depicts the conflict between romantic ideals and harsh reality, the gradual crushing of young talent under pressure from abroad.
The work is an excellent social-psychological novel that thematizes the fate of a gifted “little man”, the price of education for the poor, the conflict between tradition and modernity and the collapse of ideals. Rich descriptions of Podgorje and Prague, vivid characters, and deep psychology make this novel a classic of 19th-century Croatian literature and a harbinger of Novak's great works such as The Last Stipančićs.
One copy is available





