
Istorija arapske književnosti
One copy is available

One copy is available
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The most famous novel by Ivo Andrić, for which he received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1961. The work is structured as a series of 24 short stories connected around a central motif – the Mehmed-paša Sokolović bridge over the Drina River in Višegrad.
The collection is one of Nešić's key books from the post-war period of the 1990s, when he faced exile, minority status, and identity fractures on the border of two worlds – Croatian and Serbian, Slavonian and Danube.
Durability is a big illusion, that's the first thing a person finds out when it stops lasting.
Vlado Bulatović's Step Back Viba is a collection of sharp, witty and thoughtful aphorisms about man, society and government. Through satire and irony, Viba exposes the hypocrisy of the system and human weaknesses, calling for reflection and moral distance
In the comedy Pokondirena tikva, the main character Fema, an ordinary citizen obsessed with the upper class, comically tries to play the role of a lady. The play mocks snobbery, hypocrisy, and the desire for someone else's appearance and manners.
Through essays, reflections, and historical accounts, the author attempts to explain how past events have shaped the contemporary identity of peoples and societies in this region.