Milan Rakić
{{Short description|Serbian poet-diplomat and academic}}
{{For|the Slovenian footballer|Milan Rakič}}
{{Infobox writer
|name = Milan Rakić
|image = Milan Rakić.jpg
|imagesize = 185px
|caption =
|birth_date = 18 September 1876
|birth_place = Belgrade, Principality of Serbia
|death_date = {{death date and age|1938|06|30|1876|09|18|df=yes}}
|death_place = Zagreb, Kingdom of Yugoslavia
| resting_place = Belgrade New Cemetery
|occupation = Writer, poet, diplomat
|nationality = Serbian
|alma_mater =
|period =
|genre =
|notableworks =
|influences =
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|website =
}}
Milan Rakić (Serbian Cyrillic: Милан Ракић; 18 September 1876 – 30 June 1938) was a Serbian poet-diplomat{{cite web |url=http://www.novosti.rs/dodatni_sadrzaj/clanci.119.html:591906-Pesnik-diplomata-i-oslobodilac |author=Večernje novosti |author-link=Večernje novosti |title= Pesnik, diplomata i oslobodilac |accessdate=2019-10-04 |date=2016-02-20 |language=Serbian}} and academic.
He focused on dodecasyllable and hendecasyllable verse, which allowed him to achieve beautiful rhythm and rhyme in his poems. He was quite a perfectionist and therefore only published three collections of poems (1903, 1912, 1924). He wrote largely about death and non-existence, keeping the tone sceptical and ironic. Some of his most well-known poems are An Honest Song (Iskrena pesma), A Desperate Song (Očajna pesma), Jefimija, Simonida and At Gazi-Mestan (Na Gazi-Mestanu). He was a member of the Serbian Royal Academy (1934).{{Cite web |title=Rakic Milan |url=https://www.sanu.ac.rs/clan/rakic-milan/ |access-date=2024-07-26 |website=www.sanu.ac.rs}}
Biography
=Early life=
Rakić was born on 18 September 1876 in Belgrade to father Mita and mother Ana (née Milićević). His father, educated abroad, was Serbia's Minister of Finance (1888) and his mother was the daughter of Serbian writer Milan Milićević.
He finished elementary school (grade school) and high school (gymnasium) in Belgrade. He completed law school in Paris. It was in Paris that he, like Jovan Dučić, came under the influence of French Symbolist poets. They both had learned to admire French culture and had dreamed of a better world after the war. After returning to Belgrade from Paris he became a diplomat (also like Dučić) for the Serbian (and later Yugoslav) government and remained in that job until nearly his death, representing the country abroad.name="Novosti ref" His first diplomatic posting was Skopje in Ottoman Macedonia during the turbulent time of the Macedonian Struggle where Serbs, Turks, schismatic Exarchists and their Komitaji, Greek Andart cheta groups, and Albanian Kachaks all vied for supremacy.{{cite web | url=https://openurl.ebsco.com/EPDB%3Agcd%3A2%3A27774754/detailv2?sid=ebsco%3Aplink%3Ascholar&id=ebsco%3Agcd%3A59385619&crl=c | title=BOGDAN RADENKOVIĆ AND MILAN RAKIĆ. | Istorijski časopis | EBSCOhost | date=June 2008 | volume=57 }}
=Personal life=
His sister Ljubica was married to Milan Grol; and his wife Milica was the daughter of Ljubomir Kovačević, a distinguished Serbian historian and politician.{{Cite web |title=Национална Ревија - National Review |url=https://www.nacionalnarevija.com/tekstovi/br10/Sloboda%20-%20Reci%20im,%20sine%20moj.html |access-date=2024-07-26 |website=www.nacionalnarevija.com}}
=Death=
He died prematurely in 1938 in Zagreb after a surgical operation. He is interred in the Belgrade New Cemetery.[http://graves.mf.uni-lj.si/graves/1626/milan-rakic International graves]
Works
- Collection of Poems, 1903
- Collection of Poems, 1912
- Collection of Poems, 1924
References
{{Reflist}}
Sources
- Jovan Skerlić, Istorija nove srpske književnosti (Belgrade, 1914 and 1921), pp. 458–60.
External links
{{wikisource|works=or}}
{{commons category}}
- {{Find a Grave|18657791|Milan Rakić}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20051025104712/http://suc.suc.org/culture/history/Hist_Serb_Culture/chr/New_Literature.html Article on Serbian Poetry]
- [https://sites.google.com/site/projectgoethe/Home/milan-raki Translated works by Milan Rakić]
- {{Librivox author |id=12068}}
{{Authority control}}
{{Serbian literature}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Rakic, Milan}}
Category:Writers from Belgrade
Category:20th-century Serbian people
Category:Diplomats from Belgrade
Category:People from the Principality of Serbia