Danilo Kocevski

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Danilo Kocevski
Native name
Данило Коцевски
BornDanilo Kocevski
(1947-04-23)April 23, 1947
Kumanovo
SFRY (today: North Macedonia)
DiedSeptember 13, 2020(2020-09-13) (aged 73)
Skopje, North Macedonia
Occupationliterary critic, novelist, playwright, poet
LanguageMacedonian
NationalityMacedonian
Period1981-2020
Children2

Danilo Kocevski (23 April 1947, Kumanovo – 13 September 2020, Skopje) was a Macedonian literary critic, novelist, playwright and poet, as well as a noted chronicler of the history of Skopje. He appeared in the 2001[1] TV Show Dossier Skopje[2] dressed as Superman.[3][4]

Books published[edit]

Essays and Criticism[edit]

  • Yes and No (1981)
  • For New Trends (1984)
  • Still Moves (1985)
  • Criticism as a Delusion (1988)
  • The Poetics of Postmodernism (1989)
  • Antichomes of criticism (1989)
  • Modern and postmodern (1993)
  • Postmodern Currents (1996)
  • New Essays (2001)
  • The Revolt of the Intellectuals (2007)
  • The paths of literary criticism (2010)[5]
  • For Literature till the last breath (2016)[6]

Novels[edit]

  • Odyssey (1991)
  • Will we go to Joe (1992)
  • Justiniana, the city that does not exist (1999)
  • Novel for Noah (2003)
  • Picolomini at the gates of Skopje (2005)

Prose[edit]

  • Travel to Arcachon (1989)
  • The Magic of Skopje (1997)

Poetry[edit]

  • Where the song is born (1992)
  • Poet's Death (1995)

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Dossier Skopje Retrieved 21.01.2017 (Macedonian)
  2. ^ Дупната вреќа Archived 2017-02-02 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 21.01.2017 (Macedonian)
  3. ^ Данило Коцевски ќе решава за издаваштвото Archived 2017-02-02 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 21.01.2017 (Macedonian)
  4. ^ Интелектуалецот во транзицијата Archived 2017-02-02 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 21.01.2017 (Macedonian)
  5. ^ Нова книга од Данило Коцевски Archived 2017-02-02 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 21.01.2017 (Macedonian)
  6. ^ Објавена „За книжевноста до последен здив“ на Данило Коцевски Retrieved 21.01.2017 (Macedonian)