Lazar Komarčić

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Lazar Komarčić
Biografske informacije
Rođenje(1839-01-21)21. 1. 1839.
Komartica, Osmansko carstvo (danas Crna Gora)
Smrt22. 1. 1909. (dob: 70)
Beograd, Kraljevina Srbija
Obrazovanje
Zanimanjenovinar, književnik
Opus
Književne vrstenaučna fantastika, kriminalistički žanr
Znamenita djela

Lazar Komarčić (Komartica, Pljevlja, 9/21. januar 1839Beograd, 9/22. januar 1909) je bio srpski novinar i književnik.

Biografija[uredi | uredi kod]

Napisao je 1902. prvi srpski naučno-fantastični roman Jedna ugašena zvezda, koji se uz dramu Dragutina Ilića Posle milijon godina (1889) smatra za temelj moderne srpske naučne fantastike.

Roman Jedan razoreni um je 1893. nagradila je Srpska kraljevska akademija, a zapažena je bila i zbirka pripovedaka Zapisnik jednog pokojnika. Napisao je i romane „Dragocena ogrlica“ (1880), „Dva amaneta“ (1893), „Prosioci“ (1905). Ovi romani imaju kriminalistički zaplet i spadaju među prve takve vrste na srpskom jeziku.[1]

Za razliku od Žil Verna i H. Dž. Velsa gotovo da je potpuno zaboravljen. Društvo ljubitelja fantastike „Lazar Komarčić“ neguje naučnu fantastiku i za ime svog društva je uzelo ime jednog od prvih ljudi koji su pisali naučnu fantastiku na srpskim i južnoslovenskim prostorima.

Reference[uredi | uredi kod]

  1. 100 ličnosti, ljudi koji su promenili svet, broj 61. Artur Konan Dojl izdanje na srpskom jeziku, 2. jun 2010.

Spoljašnje veze[uredi | uredi kod]

Evo prevod na engleskom za Wikipediju englesku:

Lazar Komarčić[uredi | uredi kod]

Lazar Komarčić (Komartica, Pljevlja, 9 January 1839 - Belgrade, Serbia, 9 January 1909) is nowadays recognized as Serbian first science fiction novelist. He was a novelist, playwright and best known for his profound influence on what was to be become later the literary genres of science fiction and crime novels. He was the most read author during the turn of the century, according to literary critic Jovan Skerlić. Unfortunately, science fiction and crime novel writing at the begininning of the 20th century was not considered a literary pursuit and as time passed he was forgotten until the 1970s when his works were revived.

Biography[uredi | uredi kod]

Lazar Komarčić was born in a small village of Komartica, near the town of Pljevlja, Serbia (then part of the Ottoman Empire), on the ninth of January 1839, to Milenko and Spasenija Komorica of Gornja Maoča in northeastern Bosnia. Lazar's uncle was killed by Turks and Milenko (Lazar's father) took revenge. He was captured and imprisoned in Pljevlja. After Milenko escaped, he took his wife and children and moved with kin in Valjevo. It was at this time that the family changed their surname to Komarčić. In Valjevo Lazar started school, but his parents soon both died. He moved to Belgrade where he studied at the Grande école (University of Belgrade).

A defining incident of Komarčić's life was the Turkish bombardment of Belgrade in 1862 that left him without three fingers. An incident erupted at Čukur ćesma when teenager Savo Petković, who was trying to get water at the fountain (ćesma) was shot and killed in cold blood by a Turkish soldier. That killing infurieted the citizens of Belgrade and a major conflict erupted between Serbs and Turkish occupying forces. Belgrade was then bombarded from Kalemegdan. During that bombardment by Turkish artillery from the Kalimegdan fortress, Komarčić at twenty-three held his ground together with the rest of Serbian insurgents. A Turkish grenade exploded near him causing him to loose three fingers on his right hand. What become known as the "Čukur ćesma conflict" brought the intervention of the European Powers and the Turks were eventually expelled from Belgrade.

After receiving that wound Komarčić decided to go into teaching, and from this time onwards he made writing his principal work.

To help out his sister he went to Crna Bara to buy and take over her business. After three or four years as a tavern-keeper he returned to Belgrade and began his literary career by contributing articles to a local journal, "Srbija". He also wrote for "Zbor". Eight of his novels were published at a time when Jules Verne, Camille Flammarion, and H. G. Wells were independenly working on the same genre. His most popular novel "Jedna ugasena zvezda" (One Extinguished Star) is heavily influenced by spiritism. Komarčić, like most writers of his generation, was influenced by Rufina Noeggerath (1821-1908), the famous Finnish spiritist who was known affectionately as "Bonne Maman" in her day.

Before the war of 1876 Komarčić took a leading place among the most radical section of Serbian politicians as an opponent of the "opportunists" who continued the policy of Svetozar Marković. In 1875 he became an editor of "Zbor", and worked with varying success to bring about the revision of the sentences passed on the so-called socialists.

Komarčić descriptive powers were of the highest order, and his style, pure of all affectations and embellishments, is of singular force and suppleness. He was as original a genius as Serbia produced during the turn of the century, the late 19th to the early 20th.

He died at Belgrade on the ninth of January 1909.

Works[uredi | uredi kod]

Lazar Komarčić position in Serbian literature is unique. There was nothing like his type of novel before his time. Komarčić wrote in 1902 the first modern Serbian science fiction novel "Jedna ugasena zvezda" (One Extinguished Star), and in collaboration with Dragutin Ilic, a drama entitled "Posle milijon godina" (A Million Years From Now, 1888). Interestingly, the first science fiction drama on this planet was performed in Belgrade and published in the magazine Kolo in 1889. Both the novel and the drama are now considered the foundation of Serbian science fiction literature.

Also, Komarčić wrote such popular novels as "Dragocena ogrlica" (An Expensive Necklace) in 1880, "Dva Amaneta" in 1893, "Prosioci" (Beggers, 1905), "Jedan razoren um: i Zapisnik jednog pokojnika" (1908), "Mućenici za slobodu", "Pretci i potomci: istorijske slike iz postanja danasnje Srbije" (1905), "Bezdušnici" (Heartless Men, novel).

Legacy[uredi | uredi kod]

His contribution to the genre as writer, along with the novelists Jules Verne and H. G. Wells, he is one person in Serbia sometimes called "The Father of Science Fiction". In his honor, awards are presented to authors of the best science fiction work by the "Društvo ljubitelja fanatstike "Lazar Komarčić". This Belgrade sci-fi fan club Lazar Komarčić continues to keep his name alive today.

References[uredi | uredi kod]

Translated and adapted from Serbian Wikipedia: https://sh.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lazar_Komar%C4%8Di%C4%87