Risto Ratković

Risto Ratković (3 September 1903 – 18 June 1954) was a Serbian avant-garde (surrealist) writer and diplomat.[1]

Biography

He was born in an impoverished trading family in Bijelo Polje in Montenegro.[2] He finished Gymnasium in Novi Pazar, and in 1923 went to Belgrade where he enrolled in Faculty of Philosophy. In the period from 1927 to 1931. He worked in the Ministry of Education and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and spent seven years in the diplomatic service in France, Soviet Union, Egypt (1938–1945). He returned home in 1945.[3]

Literary work

Literary Orientation

Ratković belongs to the moderately modernist, and ideologically leftist orientation in Serbian expressionism, which in the further course of interwar literature approached Serbian Surrealism and social literature, but still remained independent. He was the main figure of that group and contributed the most to its theoretical self-determination.

Understanding poetry

He presented his understanding of poetry in the program article "On Surrealism from My Life". In form and intention, the article is reminiscent of the explanation of "Sumatra" of Miloš Crnjanski, and the poetry is explained mostly in the mystical key of the song entitled "Maybe Sleeping" by Vladislav Petković Dis. Ratković understood surrealism as bringing a dream into reality, and he expressed his poetic determination with the somewhat brutal motto "to rape reality with a dream". A song is created in a dream, it is a photograph of a dream, and the role of reason is secondary, it only organizes the poetic material.[4]

Poetry

Continuing Vladislav Petković Dis's visionary, dreamy line of Serbian poetry, Ratković sees secret connections and elusive meanings in everything. Similar to Dis and Rade Drainac, he was a newcomer from the province. It is deeply ingrained patriarchal sense of life and the mysticism of the primitive mentality. On this basis, the ideas were upgraded in the twentieth century with Freud psychoanalysis, atheism and Marxism. This meeting of mentality and education brought Ratković's poetry unusual visions, contacts with the afterlife, communication with unknown beings or with dead, close people. These poetic images are concretized in sudden metaphors and unusual syntactic twists, which affects the partial or complete absence of a strictly understood logic.

The language of his poetry seems clumsy, torn as if trying to tell us some deep secret or tonight's dream.

These features are especially characteristic of songs from the earlier period of creation, in the collection "Dead Gloves" and the short poem "Leviathan". Among them, the song "Midnight of me" (Ponoc Mene)[5] stands out, created during night vigils in front of the shadow of a dead woman. In another poem, the poet is so convinced of the reality of the dead that he is surprised that his dead wife does not appear to him ("you are dead and you are not there").

In the thirties, Ratković also wrote social poems, but they are few and poetically weaker.

His diplomatic mission in Egypt brought the last collection of poems "From the Orient" (Sa Orijenta).[6] It poetically deals with the experience of Saharan Desert, Oriental Misery and Mediterranean Sun, as well as contact with the history and present of the Middle East.

Prose

Ratković also wrote a short novel Nevidbog ("Invisible God").[7]Nevidbog is a kind of family sage, a story about the downfall of some and the rise of other families in his homeland. The novel is composed as a series of independent stories, and among the best are those about the main character's memories of his childhood and his experiences under Austrian occupation. It was first published in 1933 and many more times since.

He also wrote [essays] on literary issues and criticism of certain books.

Works (partial list)

  • "Dead Gloves" and "Leviathan" (1927), collections of poems,
  • "Silences on Literature" (1928), essays,
  • "Dawn" (Zora, 1929), Drama,
  • "Invisible God" (Nevidbog, 1933), Novel,
  • "Touches" (1952), A selection from poetry,
  • "From the Orient" (Sa Orijenta, 1955), travel prose.[8]
  • Risto Ratković (1962)[9]
  • Poetry (Poezija, 1991)[10]
  • Selected Poems: Roman, drama - Volume 1-4 (Izabrana djela)[11]

Legacy

  • Risto Ratković Award:[12] Since 1973, "Ratković's Poetry Evenings" were awarded the Ratković Prize for a book of poetry.[13]

References

  1. Komatina, Olga Vojičić (5 February 2013). "NADREALISTIČKI ČASOPISI RISTA RATKOVIĆA". Folia Linguistica et Litteraria (8): 145–160 via www.ceeol.com.
  2. Howexpert; Kralj, Svetlana (July 2018). Montenegro Travel Guide: Discover, Experience, and Explore Montenegro's Beaches, Beauty, Cities, Culture, Food, People, & More to the Fullest from a to Z. ISBN 9781647587192.
  3. "Jovan Deretic: Kratka istorija srpske knjizevnosti". www.rastko.rs.
  4. Vojičić-Komatina, Olga (12 December 2016). "The Avant – Garde Codes in the Poetry of Risto Ratković". Književna smotra: Časopis za svjetsku književnost. 48 (182(4)): 55–68 via hrcak.srce.hr.
  5. Ratkovic, Risto (1966). "Ponoc Mene".
  6. Ratković, Risto (1955). "Sa Orijenta".
  7. Ratković, Risto (1994). Nevidbog. ISBN 9788630502101.
  8. Ratković, Risto (1955). "Sa Orijenta".
  9. Ratković, Risto (1962). "Risto Ratković".
  10. Ratković, Risto (1991). Poezija. ISBN 9788642702445.
  11. Ratković, Risto (1991). "Izabrana djela: Roman, drama".
  12. Kasjas, Piotr (16 October 2016). Anthology of Slavic Poetry. ISBN 9781326786229.
  13. "Competition for the Risto Ratković Literary Prize". CDM. Retrieved 7 September 2017.
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