Funeral and mourning speeches by Slovak authors from Vojvodina in the 19th century (Literature and funeral culture in Serbian Vojvodina in the 19th century) Cover Image

Dve ukážky funerálnej kultúry zo srbskej Vojvodiny
Funeral and mourning speeches by Slovak authors from Vojvodina in the 19th century (Literature and funeral culture in Serbian Vojvodina in the 19th century)

Author(s): Erika Brtáňová
Subject(s): Anthropology, Social Sciences, Language and Literature Studies, Studies of Literature, Slovak Literature, Cultural Anthropology / Ethnology
Published by: Ústav slovenskej literatúry SAV
Keywords: Vojvodina; 19th century; funeral culture; mourning poem; funeral speech

Summary/Abstract: In the “lowland” environment, within the territory of present-day Serbian Vojvodina, remarkable literary texts associated with the contemporary funeral culture emerged in the 19th century. The first example is the mourning poem by Juraj Rohoň (1773 – 1831), which he wrote during his time in Hložany and delivered at the funeral of Senior Ondrej Stehla in February 1818. This manuscript composition is evidence of an elegiac genre adapted to the church environment, characterized by classicist elevation and imagery. The first collection of funeral speeches composed by Slovak Evangelical preacher Ján Kutlík senior (1806 – 1890), published as Pohřebník aneb Kázně a řečí pohřební ([The mourner or Funeral sermons and speeches], 1852), was also written in Vojvodina. Kutlík worked as a teacher and later a preacher in Stara Pazova, where he likely began conceptualising his first funeral speeches, which became the basis for the collection he published in Sarvaš. In his model speeches addressed to young preachers, he emphasises spiritual counselling and consolation for the bereaved. Through presented insights into education, enlightenment, patriotism, and the composition of sermons, Kutlík’s preaching shares many commonalities with the preaching of Ján Kollár.

  • Issue Year: 70/2023
  • Issue No: 6
  • Page Range: 690-702
  • Page Count: 13
  • Language: Slovak
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