Ivan Aralica
Ivan Aralica is a Croatian novelist and essayist.
Biography
Born in Promina near Knin, and having finished pedagogical school and Philosophical Faculty at the University of Zadar, Aralica had worked since 1953 as a high school teacher in the backwater villages of the rural hinterland of northern and central Dalmatia. After a period of communist infatuation, Aralica was swept into the vortex of turbulent events known as the Croatian Spring. During this tumultuous era he allied with those who advocated greater Croatian autonomy and freedom for Croatian people in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. The crackdown on the Croatian national movement and subsequent professional and social degradation resulted in Aralica's return to his Catholic-Christian roots, abandonment of doctrinaire propagandist literature and formation of his own literary credo. Among world authors, he was influenced chiefly by realist fiction and early modernism, the key authors being Ivo Andrić, Thomas Mann and Knut Hamsun.From 1979 to 1989 Aralica published eight novels, which can be best described as modernist rewritings of historical fiction. The best among them show similar traits: these are essentially novels of complex narrative techniques recreating dramatic events in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina from 16th to 18th century and describing historical fatum of Croats caught in the "Clash of Civilizations"- a three centuries long warfare between the Austrian Empire, the Ottoman Empire and Venice. Aralica successfully mastered many divergent elements in his fiction, so that his finest novels are both replete with contemplative wisdom sayings on human condition and rammed with action; also, his artistry is expressed in numerous naturalist passages integrated in the overarching Christian vision of life where natural and the supernatural fuse into one reality.
After the reintroduction of a multi-party system in 1990 and subsequent breakup of Yugoslavia, Aralica was elected to the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts; also, he re-entered politics, this time on the list of Croatian Democratic Union, then headed by the first president of Croatia since its independence Franjo Tuđman. Aralica held a few influential positions, the most important among them being vice-president of Croatian Parliament. During this period he wrote two books of political essays, and two other novels.
The year 2000 was another turning point for Aralica: his party, HDZ, lost the elections and power, and writer was embroiled in a bitter polemic with new authorities. Aralica began writing satirical romans à clef. The most famous one is Fukara from 2002, a satirical-political attack on "multi-culturalist ideology" as promulgated by controversial American billionaire George Soros. The literary value of his works published during this period was often disputed, and they were seen by many left-wing literary critics as little more than tasteless political pamphlets. However, Aralica has also become one of the cultural and intellectual icons of nationalist conservatism in Croatia, advocating the return to the tradition symbolized by "ognjište". Intellectuals on the political right defended his novels claiming that they were brilliant political satires.
Works
Konjanik Opsjene paklenih crteža Psi u trgovištu Put bez sna Duše robova Graditelj svratišta Asmodejev šal Zadah ocvalog imperija Sokak triju ruža Majka Marija Spletanje i raspletanje čvorova Što sam rekao o Bosni I tu je kraj Ambra Fukara Puž- ''Duh zloduha''