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Zlatoje Martinov

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Zlatoje Martinov
Born (1953-12-16) 16 December 1953 (age 70)
Pančevo, SR Serbia, SFR Yugoslavia
NationalitySerbian

Zlatoje Martinov (Serbian-Cyrillic: Златоје Мартинов; born 16 December 1953, Pančevo) is a Serbian publicist and writer.

Biography

Martinov studied economics (BS) at the University of Belgrade. He was director of the cooperative Res Publica, assistant of Nebojša Popov for several years and last editor-in-chief of the magazine Republika. Martinov's reports, reviews and essays have also been published in magazines such as Sveske (Serbian: Notebooks), Krovovi (Serbian: Roofs), Fenster (German: Windows) and some others. His critical articles reflected social, political, cultural and historical themes of Serbian society. Martinov was the director of the Documentation Center of Germans of Vojvodina (Centar za dokumentaciju o vojvođanskim Nemcima) from 1994 to 2002, and during this time he promoted cultural dialogue between Serbian majority and German minority. In 2000 and 2003, he participated as a Serbian representative at the Danube Swabian symposia ARDI in Vienna.

He is interested in Esperanto culture since several decades, member of the Esperanto PEN center in La Chaux-de-Fonds and editor-in-chief of the Esperanto magazine Literatura Foiro. Martinov is member of the Danube Swabian Heimathaus Foundation in Sremski Karlovci. The writer belongs to the committee of the Alliance of Anti-fascists of Serbia (Savez antifašista Srbije). He lives in Belgrade.[1][2][3][4][5]

Bibliography (selection)

Prose

  • Osmeh Emi Majer (The Smile of Emi Majer; short stories), Banatski Forum, Pančevo 2002, ISBN 86-902963-1-X.[6]
  • Preljubnička biblija: priče (Bible for Adulterers: short stories), Mali Nemo, Pančevo 2004, ISBN 86-83453-40-5.

Poetry

  • Svetu na dar: antologija srpske poezije za decu (A Gift to the World: Anthology of Serbian Poems for Children), in Serbian and Esperanto, Strategia, Belgrade 1996.

Essays

Articles

  • Zašto Kosovo nije "srce Srbije"? (Why Kosovo Is Not the "Heart of Serbia"?), Republika No. 426-427, Belgrade 2008.[10]
  • Začarani krug (Vicious Circle), newsletter of Medija Centar Beograd (Медија Центар Београд), Belgrade 2011.[11]

Drama

Translations to Esperanto

References

  1. ^ Republika, Archive 1996–2015.
  2. ^ ARDI Symposia Donauschwaben of United States.
  3. ^ Esperanta PEN, Esperanta Civito.
  4. ^ Official website of Heimathaus Foundation, retrieved on 2018-04-11.
  5. ^ Savez antifašista Srbije.
  6. ^ Das Lächeln der Emi Meier (German), Fenster No. 06/2006 (PDF), p. 22-24, Retrieved on 2017-05-14.
  7. ^ Gavrilo Princip – heroj ili terorista? (PDF), Retrieved on 2017-05-13.
  8. ^ NDH i Nedićeva Srbija, selection of different reviews, Portal hrvatske historiografije (Portal of Croatian historiography), retrieved 2019-03-16.
  9. ^ Selected essays, Academia.edu, retrieved 2019-03-16.
  10. ^ Serbian (Republika Archive) English (Bosnian Institute), Retrieved on 2017-05-17.
  11. ^ Serbian and English, Retrieved on 2017-05-18.
  12. ^ Kobno pismo, Review by Dimitrije Janičić, Retrieved on 2017-01-25