
Studije i članci I.
Studies and Articles I. (1944) contains a selection of the author's most important literary studies and essays on Janko Leskovar, August Šenoa, Gjalski, Eugen Kvaternik, Milan Ogrizović and Croatian theatre. A mature critical and essayistic edition.
The eighth volume of Nehajev's Collected Works brings together the author's most significant essayistic and critical works. This volume presents Nehajev in the role of a shrewd literary critic and essayist who combines psychological depth, broad cultural awareness, and a subtle analytical style.
The volume focuses on studies dedicated to key figures in Croatian literature. Nehajev analyzes Janka Leskovar, a writer of a similar sensibility, emphasizing motifs of decadence, provincial melancholy, and psychological complexity. He devotes great attention to August Šenoa, especially his journalistic work, evaluating him as a public figure and polemicist who strongly influenced the shaping of the Croatian literary scene. The author also looks back at his contemporaries – he writes about Vladimir Nazor, Milan Ogrizović (obituary), and Ksaver Šandor Gjalski, whose works he evaluates with respect and critical distance. Of particular interest is the study of the youth drama Eugen Kvaternik, in which Nehajev combines a literary approach with a historical and political context. In the essay On the Breviary of Stanko Vraz he demonstrates a fine understanding of romantic lyricism and Vraz's poetic sensibility.
A separate chapter is dedicated to Croatian theater, an area in which Nehajev worked as an influential critic for decades. Here he presents his view of the development of theatrical art, repertoire and the role of theater in national life.
All studies and articles are permeated with Nehajev's characteristic style - elegant, precise and psychologically penetrating. He does not stop only at external assessments of the work, but enters the inner world of writers, explores the motives of their creativity and places them in a wider European and national context. His criticism often bears a personal touch, subtle irony and a deep understanding of the conflict between artists and society.
This 1944 edition is part of the collected works of Milutin Cihlar Nehajev (1880–1931) and is rare today, especially in its original cover. It is an essential read for anyone interested in Croatian literary modernism, realism, and the cultural history of the first half of the 20th century.
One copy is available





