THE GREAT WAR IN STANISLAV KRAKOV'S BOOK THE LIFE OF A MAN IN THE BALKANS Cover Image

ПРИКАЗ ВЕЛИКОГ РАТА У КЊИЗИ ЖИВОТ ЧОВЕКА НА БАЛКАНУ СТАНИСЛАВА КРАКОВА
THE GREAT WAR IN STANISLAV KRAKOV'S BOOK THE LIFE OF A MAN IN THE BALKANS

Author(s): Goran M. Maksimović
Subject(s): Recent History (1900 till today), Serbian Literature, Drama
Published by: Universitatea de Vest din Timişoara
Keywords: Great War; Albania; Corfu; Salonica Front; autobiography; memoirs; novel; story;

Summary/Abstract: The paper analyzes the review of the Great War (1914-1918) in the memoir book The Life of a Man in the Balkans, by the writer Stanislav Krakov (1895-1968), which he wrote most probably between 1936 and 1968, and was published from a manuscript legacy three decades later after his death, in 1997. Krakov directly participated as a participant at the front in three wars, the First and Second Balkan Wars and the Great War, during which he was severely wounded three times and awarded several times for heroism. The subject of our special analysis is a review of events from the First World War. This refers primarily to the mobilization and war operations in 1914, and then to the withdrawal of the serbian army at the end of 1915 and the beginning of 1916 through Montenegro and Albania, all the way to the Greek island of Corfu. Krakov presented the most complete picture of the war operations in the records from the Salonica Front (1916-1918), as well as in the review of the war operations for the liberation of the entire country until the end of 1918. It is one of the most exciting books of Serbian documentary-artistic prose written in the 20th century, in which the features of autobiographical-memoir and novel prose intersect in a creative way.

  • Issue Year: 7/2021
  • Issue No: 7
  • Page Range: 133-144
  • Page Count: 12
  • Language: Serbian
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