Tone Seliškar
Tone Seliškar | |
---|---|
Born |
Ljubljana, Austria-Hungary (now Slovenia) | 1 April 1900
Died |
10 August 1969 Ljubljana |
Occupation | Writer, poet, teacher, journalist |
Notable work(s) | Bratovščina Sinjega galeba, Mule |
Notable award(s) |
Prešeren Award 1947 for the story Tovariši' |
Tone Seliškar (1 April 1900 – 10 August 1969) was a Slovene writer, poet, journalist and teacher. He published poetry, short stories and novels and is also known for his youth literature. Together with Mile Klopčič, he is considered the foremost representative of Slovene social realist poetry of the 1930s and 1940s.
Seliškar was born in Ljubljana in what was then Austria-Hungary in 1900 as the youngest child in a family of seven children. He became a teacher and worked in Dramlje, Trbovlje and Ljubljana. At the encouragement of Prežihov Voranc Seliškar became an activist in the Slovene Liberation Front in 1942 and in 1943 joined the partisans. He used the motif of life in the partisans in many of his later works. After the war he worked as a journalist and editor.[1]
In 1947 he won the Prešeren Award for his story Tovariši (Comrades).[2]
The public library in Trbovlje is named after Seliškar.[3]
Poetry collections
- Trbovlje (1923)
- Pesmi pričakovanja (Poems of Expectation) (1937)
- Sovražnik (The Enemy) (1944)
- V naročju domovine (On the Lap of the Motherland) (1947)
Youth literature
- Rudi (1929)
- Bratovščina Sinjega galeba (1936)
- Janko in Metka (1939)
- Hudournik (1939)
- Tovariši (1946)
- Mule (1948)
- Liščki (1950)
- Dedek Som (1953)
- Posadka brez ladje (1956)
- Velika gala predstava (1958)
- Deklica z junaškim srcem (1959)
- Martinček- sin brigade (1959)
- Jadra na koncu sveta (1962)
- Ribič Luka in delfin (1963)
- Otroci partizanskega rodu (1963)
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tone Seliškar. |
- ↑ Helga Glušič, Sto Slovenskih Pripovednikov (Ljubljana: Prešernova družba, 1996) ISBN 961-6186-21-3
- ↑ Slovenian Ministry of Culture, complete list of the Grand Prešeren Awards recipients
- ↑ Tone Seliškar Library site