| Serbia in the Summer Heat |
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| Ivan Čolović | |
| 22.07.2008. | |
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There
are summer days when the great heat prevents those living in high-rise blocks
from doing anything useful, and when even air-conditioning is helpless. This
seemingly commonplace summer complaint has nevertheless stimulated one writer
to describe it in so to speak poetic fashion. The result is a prose poem with
the title Serbia in the Summer Heat, which begins: ‘The great, almost
unbearable heat in the stone sarcophagi - read apartment blocks - prevents the
functioning of all serious activity, not just in the metropolis. The petrified
material, seemingly taken from eternal Pharaonic constructions and packed with
armature, furiously resists the installed machines designed to infuse the
interior of the sarcophagi with crumbs of mountain ozone and traces of life’.
The author of this poetic text is one Svetislav D. Božević, a professor at the
The reviewer and publisher may have found such pedagogical value also in Božić’s inspired depiction of lepinja [flat bread] with kajmak [clotted cream], which goes like this: ‘Lepinja with kajmak, this holiday of the simple gastronomy of a noble nation that has surpassed its poverty with an archipelago woven of the most precious aromas.’ I am not sure, though, whether The Murmurous Summer of 2006 would have merited publication by such an important institution, commonly described as national, as the Foundation for Textbooks, had its author poetically articulated only the aforementioned and similar themes from everyday life. It is more likely that the Foundation accepted this work mainly because it contains poems about far more important and prestigious themes, themes from recent and more distant Serbian history, and indeed important issues too of the Serbian present. Thus,
for example, when teachers come to tell their pupils about the situation in
History
teachers will be able to find, in this publication by the Foundation for
Textbooks, suitable material also on historical relations between the Serbs and
other nations, and especially between the Serbs and the Croats. They will find
a pedagogically appropriate articulation of the subject on the pages of Božić’sMurmurous Summer dedicated to Nikola Tesla. The teachers will read this,
then instruct their pupils to come up with neat, summary and
patriotically-inspired descriptions of Tesla’s homeland, which is
Peščanik, Radio b92, 09.11.2007. |
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