Milutin Uskoković | |
Birth Date: | 4 June 1884 |
Birth Place: | Užice, Serbia |
Death Place: | Kuršumlija, Serbia |
Occupation: | Writer |
Nationality: | Serbian |
Alma Mater: | University of Geneva |
Milutin Uskoković (Serbian: Милутин Ускоковић; 4 June 1884 – 15 October 1915) was a Serbian novelist, short story writer and soldier.[1]
Milutin Uskoković was born at Užice, Serbia, on 4 June 1884 and killed himself at Kuršumlija in southern Serbia on 15 October 1915 while witnessing the tragic retreat of the Serbian army.[2] His suicide note read: "I can no longer endure the destruction of my fatherland!"
He graduated from University of Geneva's Law School with a Doctor of Jurisprudence degree[3] in 1910.
Like Veljko Miličević, Uskoković mixed fiction with journalism. He served as a war correspondent embedded with the Serbian army in the Balkans Wars and in World War I. To both journalism and fiction he brought an unusually rich and varied preparation.
As a novelist and short-story writer, Uskoković came to hold definite theories of the purpose and value of fiction, which he set forth in the essays collected after his death. He wrote, "Crtice" (1901) and poems in prose "Pod životom" (1905)[3] and "Vitae freagmenta" (1908).[3] His short stories "Kad ruže cvetaju" (1911) first appeared in magazines. Then two novels came, "Čedomir Ilić," published in 1914, and "Došljaci," published posthumously in 1919.
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