
Slovenska samobitnost i pisac
Dva primjerka su u ponudi

Dva primjerka su u ponudi
Zanima Vas i neka druga knjiga? Možete pretražiti našu ponudu pomoću tražilice ili prelistati knjige po kategorijama.
The collection "Programs and Manifestos in Croatian Literature", edited by Miroslav Šicel and published by Liber in 1972, represents a key collection of texts that shaped the direction of Croatian literature through various historical phases.
In his lecture How Things Are (1952), Krleža discusses the political and cultural situation of post-war Yugoslavia, emphasizing the need for critical thought, cultural renewal, and resistance to dogmatism.
The Last Sunday of Mila Dora is a historical novel about the Sarajevo assassination of 1914. Through the investigation of Judge Leo Pfeffer, it depicts the events that led to the assassination and the outbreak of World War I.
The 1914–17 diary records Krleža's writings from the First World War: personal dilemmas, pacifism, conflict with the militarism of the Monarchy, and intellectual maturation in the years of the collapse of the old world.
A detailed study of the infamous Cambridge spies, a group of British intellectuals who spied for the Soviet Union during the 20th century. The book is written in a documentary style, but with a tense narrative, making it a compelling read about betrayal a