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| | Mak Dizdar - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | After the war, Dizdar was a prominent figure in cultural life of Bosnia and Herzegovina, working as the editor-in-chief of the daily Oslobođenje, head of a few state-sponsored publishing houses and, finally, as a professional writer and the President of Writers' Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina, until his death. |
 | | Dizdar's vision of life and death expresses, paradoxically, both Gnostic horror of corporeality and a sense of blessedness of the entire earth and Universe. |
 | | Mak Dizdar also fought against forced influence of the Serbian language on the Bosnian language, as Dizdar called it, in his article "Marginalije o jeziku i oko njega", Zivot, XIX/11 - 12, Sarajevo, 1970, 109-120. |
| en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Mak_Dizdar (364 words) |
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