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Bajram Redzepagic

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Dr.

Bajram Redžepagić
Born (1939-11-23) November 23, 1939 (age 84)
Plav, Kingdom of Yugoslavia
OccupationWriter
NationalityBosnian-Montenegrin
CitizenshipAustralian
EducationFaculty of Philosophy, Faculty of Medicine
Notable awardsAustralia Council for the Arts Award
Years active1977–present

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Bajram Redžepagić (born 23 November 1939) is a writer and doctor. He studied in Medical Faculty in Skopje, where he graduated in 1970. He received his master's degree from the Military Medical Academy in Belgrade in 1976 and defended his doctoral dissertation in Sarajevo five years later.

Redžepagić appeared in literature in 1956. when he receives his first cash prize for a story. He published in a large number of magazines throughout the former Yugoslavia. He was awarded many different awards, one of them being Australia's Council for the Arts Award.

Biography[edit]

Bajram Redžepagić was born in 1939 in Plav, Montenegro. He studied at the Faculty of Philosophy and Medicine in Skopje and graduated in 1970 from the Faculty of Medicine.[1] He received his master's degree in 1976 from the Military Medical Academy in Belgrade and specialized in internal medicine at the University Medical Center Sarajevo. He defended his doctoral dissertation at the University of Sarajevo in 1981. He has lectured at postgraduate classes, as well as at seminars and symposia at various universities in the country and abroad, as a lecturer or guest professor. From 1992. to 1995. he worked for the Academy of Science and Arts of Bosnia and Herzegovina[2] as the leader of 4 projects.[3]

He entered literature in the first story in 1956, when he won the first cash prize in the competition for a short story for Novela film from Zagreb.[4] He published over thirty stories in newspapers and magazines: Bgd, Knjizevne Novine, Oslobodjenje, Politika, Mostovi, Sloboda, Bagdala. He withdrew the collection of stories "Ljubav i Mržnja" from the press in the light of 1977 because he was not satisfied with the choice of stories.

He has received numerous recognitions and awards for his work, the most notable of which are: the "Trilogy" Literary Project Award, the Commonwealth of Australia, the Council for the Arts, Literature Board (2004), and the Walk of Fate Literary Project Award. After the publication of the novel "Pustinjak",[5] he was imprisoned, and an assassination attempt was made on two occasions, in the town of Plav, after reading the truth about the violent conversion of Muslims, Catholics, and Jews to Orthodoxy.[6]

He risked his life, but bravely advocated multiculturalism and freedom of religion, and against force and aggression, he was terrorized and imprisoned with threats to be liquidated and was released at the intervention of Amnesty International and Pen. He emigrated to Australia where he finally found himself in a democratic society, equal citizens and peoples, in Commonwealth Australia he found freedom and peace, where his creativity was supported by the Australian Council for the Arts, where he was recognized as a writer of excellence, and revered throughout Australia.

Works[edit]

  • Pobunjenik (1977)[7][8][9]
  • Pustinjak (1981)[10][11]
  • Bujice (1974)
  • Brod (1986)[12]
  • Ljubav i Mržnja
  • Hod Sudbine
  • Tjeskobe i Filozofski kamen
  • Nemoguće je moguće

Critical reviews[edit]

  • "This is Redžepagić's special kind of innovation in the poetics of the modern novel, where the artistic image and the image of historical truth coincide, achieving an unsurpassed work."
  • "When empires change" and the story of the tragedy and trauma of the Bosniak-Muslim community in Bosnia and the Balkans in general, which begins with the collapse and withdrawal of the defeated Ottoman Empire from this area.. The ottoman-Austrian shift in Bosnia, in 1878.
    • by: Sanjin Kodrić - University Professor.
  • Bajram Redžepagić often philosophically looks at reality, often reminiscent of KANT and his critique of the pure mind.
    • by: Tvrtko Kulenović - Writer and Academic.
  • Redžepagić's narration is natural and builds on the rich narrative tradition of Andrić and Selimović
    • by: Vladeta Vuković - Academician and Historian.[13]
  • It is not just the intention to write a modern novel, with Redžepagić it is more self-awareness and charm, and that of the eastern ones, the ones that Isidora Sekulić admired with Andrić.
    • by: Nenad Radanović - Writer and Essayist.
  • Kadunić ages to the herald of the new age, the dialectical negator of power, and thus becomes an adventurous hero who opens a new historical process (...) of age to the Nietzschean "superman".
    • by: Rasim Muminovic - Philosopher
  • Unlike Meša Selimović, whose hero is in a conflict with the government in a cosmopolitan way, Redžepagić recognizes the suffering of the entire nation, the Bosniak people, about which the writer spoke romantically with astonishing boldness in difficult times.
    • by: Munib Maglajlić - University professor
  • Redžepagić deals with the tragedy of human existence, the misunderstandings of heroes with the world within them and the world around them, and the writer's intention to show all the complexity of the so-called dramas of life.
    • by: Radomir Ivanovic - Academician.
  • Bajram Redžepagić is one of the most talented narrators from our region, the kind of storyteller who treats the story in an intimate and intimate way.
    • by: Jasmin Agić - Literary critic

References[edit]

[14]

  1. "Akademik Bajram Redžepagić : Bajram Treći – poput istočnjačke magije". Kliker.info (in bosanski). 2018-07-22. Retrieved 2021-02-14.
  2. Sydney: Svečano obilježen Dan državnosti prve domovine Retrieved 2021-02-23.
  3. Akta.ba. "Bajram Redžepagić, akademik - Naučnik i književnik". Akta.ba. Retrieved 2021-02-14.
  4. "LAUREATU ZA NOBELOVU NAGRADU 2020.god. AKADEMIKU BAJRAMU REDŽEPAGIĆU - Edin Š. Krupljanin". www.orbus.one. Retrieved 2021-02-14.
  5. "Pustinjak, Bajram Redžepagić, Connectum, POINT knjižara, on-line trgovina". www.knjiga.ba (in bosanski). Retrieved 2021-02-14.
  6. Austlit. "Bajram Redzepagic | AustLit: Discover Australian Stories". www.austlit.edu.au. Retrieved 2021-02-14.
  7. "Promocija djela Bajrama Redžepagića, nedjelja 24.4.2011. godine". www.mhrr.gov.ba. Retrieved 2021-02-14.
  8. "Pobunjenik, Bajram Redžepagić, Connectum, POINT knjižara, on-line trgovina". www.knjiga.ba (in bosanski). Retrieved 2021-02-14.
  9. Sutra.ba. "Objavljen roman "Pobunjenik" Bajrama Redžepagića". www.sutra.ba. Retrieved 2021-02-14.
  10. Redžepagić, Bajram (2012). Pustinjak. Vrtovi. (in Bosnian) (Šesto izdanje (Prvo izdanje kod ovog izdavača). ed.). Sarajevo: Connectum. ISBN 978-9958-29-038-1.CS1 maint: Unrecognized language (link) Search this book on
  11. "Pustinjak, Bajram Redžepagić, Connectum, POINT knjižara, on-line trgovina". www.knjiga.ba (in bosanski). Retrieved 2021-02-14.
  12. www.amazon.com https://www.amazon.com/BROD-Bajram-Redzepagic/dp/B008JVHSPM. Retrieved 2021-02-24. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  13. "VLADETA VUKOVIĆ "TRAGANJA O ČOVJEKU I VLASTI"" (in bosanski). Retrieved 2021-02-24.
  14. "Pobunjenik knjiga autora Redžepagić, Bajram". VBZ online bookstore (in hrvatski). Retrieved 2021-02-14.



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