Abstract

The paper explores the key characteristics and the reception of glorious images [svetla slika] in the work of Dragutin Ilic, who found the material for this type of a text mostly in the New Testament legends and Serbian history in the period of the struggle for the liberation from the Ottoman rule in the early 19th century. It also aims to establish a relationship between the image [slika – a short form of narrative fiction used in Serbian Realism] as an inter-genre used by the Serbian authors of the second half of the 19th century (including Dragutin Ilic) and the glorious image. In Ilic’s works the term glorious image entails a carefully selected topic and a clearly presented message. The first part of the research focuses on glorious images in the early days of Christianity, while the second part explores glorious images from the Serbian struggle for the “Holy Cross” (i.e. the anti-Ottoman liberation struggle). Ilic published these works both in periodicals and as books in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This analysis of glorious images and the insights stemming from it are placed in the frameworks of the literary history, literary theory and comparative studies. The main common denominator of this genre in Ilic’s works, it has emerged, is ideological: his glorious images offer the reader a model of life rooted in faith, suffering and sacrifice and governed by elevated ethical and Christian principles and traditionally valued virtues. Fully aware of its importance and meaning, Ilic cautiously approaches the demanding religious and literary subject matter, which he uses as the starting point for creating his New Testament glorious images, which occasionally results in psychologically unconvincing characters or compositional incoherence or an overemphasized moral of the story – or all three at the same time. Ilic’s distinctive humor and irony, typical of many of his works, are completely absent from his glorious images from the early days of Christianity. The in-depth psychological characterization of some literary characters (such as Herodias, Yair, Judas) gives these works of narrative fiction a special quality. The contemporary critics were divided in their evaluation of Ilic’s glorious images (Marko Car and Pavle Lagaric, for instance). This part of Ilic’s oeuvre offers a wealth of material and lends itself to various research approaches: from a comparative exploration of similarly conceived texts in European literature (Selma Lagerlof, Leo Nikolayevich Tolstoy) to an analysis of intertextuality, auto-images and hetero-images to the mechanics of fantastical elements.

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