Literary Navigations. The Sea Imagery of Dragan Velikić

This article explores the function of the sea images in the fiction of the Serbian contemporary writer Dragan Velikić. The sea, a traditional symbol in world’s literature, is a key image in this writer’s texts, so much so that it amounts to nothing less than imagery of its own in his oeuvre. Imagery...

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Main Author: Maria Rita Leto
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Firenze University Press 2016-02-01
Series:Studi Slavistici
Online Access:https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/ss/article/view/2350
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spelling doaj-8e89a85378e2443f94f27889e69e49692020-11-25T03:31:11ZengFirenze University PressStudi Slavistici1824-761X1824-76012016-02-011210.13128/Studi_Slavis-1797315055Literary Navigations. The Sea Imagery of Dragan VelikićMaria Rita LetoThis article explores the function of the sea images in the fiction of the Serbian contemporary writer Dragan Velikić. The sea, a traditional symbol in world’s literature, is a key image in this writer’s texts, so much so that it amounts to nothing less than imagery of its own in his oeuvre. Imagery, however, that is very different from that handed down by the sea tradition. The author contends that the sea imagery, disseminated throughout Velikić’s works, allows the writer to create a network of intertextual references within his macro-text. At a deeper level, moreover, this imagery seems to have a twofold function in Velikić’s narrative: on the one hand, it mediates the writer’s complex relationship with the literary tradition of the past; on the other, it constitutes the core around which Velikić builds a number of virtual autobiographies: fictions conjuring up the past, both personal and cultural, permeated with auto-biographical overtones, Velikić’s stories evoke in their male protagonists various aspects of the author’s life, as well as of literary figures of the past, while never really giving rise to a full-fledged self-portrait. Thus, his stories, like ships navigating the sea, traverse several boundaries (between genres, historical and fictional self, past and present, life and literature), creating, through his idiosyncratic sea imagery, a fascinating narrative world.https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/ss/article/view/2350
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maria Rita Leto
spellingShingle Maria Rita Leto
Literary Navigations. The Sea Imagery of Dragan Velikić
Studi Slavistici
author_facet Maria Rita Leto
author_sort Maria Rita Leto
title Literary Navigations. The Sea Imagery of Dragan Velikić
title_short Literary Navigations. The Sea Imagery of Dragan Velikić
title_full Literary Navigations. The Sea Imagery of Dragan Velikić
title_fullStr Literary Navigations. The Sea Imagery of Dragan Velikić
title_full_unstemmed Literary Navigations. The Sea Imagery of Dragan Velikić
title_sort literary navigations. the sea imagery of dragan velikić
publisher Firenze University Press
series Studi Slavistici
issn 1824-761X
1824-7601
publishDate 2016-02-01
description This article explores the function of the sea images in the fiction of the Serbian contemporary writer Dragan Velikić. The sea, a traditional symbol in world’s literature, is a key image in this writer’s texts, so much so that it amounts to nothing less than imagery of its own in his oeuvre. Imagery, however, that is very different from that handed down by the sea tradition. The author contends that the sea imagery, disseminated throughout Velikić’s works, allows the writer to create a network of intertextual references within his macro-text. At a deeper level, moreover, this imagery seems to have a twofold function in Velikić’s narrative: on the one hand, it mediates the writer’s complex relationship with the literary tradition of the past; on the other, it constitutes the core around which Velikić builds a number of virtual autobiographies: fictions conjuring up the past, both personal and cultural, permeated with auto-biographical overtones, Velikić’s stories evoke in their male protagonists various aspects of the author’s life, as well as of literary figures of the past, while never really giving rise to a full-fledged self-portrait. Thus, his stories, like ships navigating the sea, traverse several boundaries (between genres, historical and fictional self, past and present, life and literature), creating, through his idiosyncratic sea imagery, a fascinating narrative world.
url https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/ss/article/view/2350
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