Issue 19

Winter 2019

paolo and marcos, on the terrace, on modern history

Nadija Rebronja
Translated by Ivana Maksić

they were walking

towards one another

across the long wall

two men

or perhaps two women

the wall was

made

of books

someone’s limbs

false events

in the end they met

having not remembered

the road

so well.

About the Author

Nadija RebronjaNadija Rebronja (Serbia, 1982) is a poet and essayist. She received her PhD in literature at the Faculty of Philosophy, Novi Sad. She was a researcher of the Institute for Slavistics in Vienna and the Faculty of Philosophy in Granada (Spain). Her poetry has been translated into English, German, Spanish, French, Italian, Turkish, Persian, Arabic, Slovenian, and Polish. She has published several books of poetry: A Dance to the Seas (Novi Pazar, 2008) and Flamenco Utopia (Kraljevo, 2014); a scientific study A Dervish or a Man, Life or Death (Belgrade, 2010), selection of poems in Spanish Alfa, Alef, Elif (Granada, 2011), poetry in Spanish Flamenco Utopia (Mexico City, 2017) and poetry in Turkish Borges’in Gözlerinden (Ankara, 2018). She works at the State University, Novi Pazar. The poetry from her book Dance to the seas in Italian served as an inspiration for making eight compositions at the conservatory Niccolo Piccini in Bari in 2016, which were later presented at several concerts in Italy, Denmark, and USA.

About the translator

Ivana Maksić (1984, Yugoslavia). She has published three poetry books: O Body Em-Body Me (Matica srpska, 2011), Beyond Communication (Presing, 2013) and La mia paura di essere schiava (translated to Italian by Fabio Barcellandi, Gilgamesh Edizioni, 2014). Her poems have been published in several anthologies and collections of poems in Serbia and ex-Yu region. She was the co-editor-in-chief of the Anthology of Serbian Social Poetry: To the Teeth (Presing, 2014) as well as of the Regional Collection of Social and Engaged Poetry: The Cut (2016). She works as an English teacher and a freelance translator.

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This