Prvobitni sajt NBCG: old.nb-cg.me

COMMEMORATION OF PROF. DR JEVREM BJELICA

Evening dedicated to prof. Dr. Jevrem Bjelica, who left a recognizable mark in Montenegrin science and culture, was held last night at the National Library of Montenegro “Đurđe Crnojević” in Cetinje.

In terms of scope and range of interests unique in Russian studies publishing in Montenegro, Professor Bjelica, in addition to literary criticism and scientific work, was also engaged in translation work from Russian, Czech, Macedonian and Slovenian.

Within this event, the bio-bibliography of Jevrem Bjelica, which was prepared by Petar Krivokapić, a bibliographer and published by the National Library of Montenegro was presented to the Cetinje audience.

Bio-bibliography, as Krivokapić pointed out, describes the life path of Professor Bjelica and his legacy: an essayist approach to classics of Russian literature, 44 Russian and Soviet writers, published in seven books - studies, as well as in numerous journals. The biggest part of this book is composed of detailed bibliography, annexes and registers.

Prof. Dr. Tatjana Jovović, Dean of the Faculty of Philology in Nikšić, gave an insight into the monographs on the Russian literature of Jevrem Bjelica. The word is, as she said, about the literary criticism from the period from 1983 to 2012.

Publicist Branko Koprivica and writer Marijan Miljić spoke about the life and work of Professor Bjelica.

He was a member and president of the Applied Linguistics Association of Montenegro, a member of the Association of Writers of Montenegro and a recipient of numerous social and professional awards and recognitions. Bjelica was a student of a generation in Slavic studies at the Cyril and Methodius University in Skopje.

He worked in the State Security Administration, but he also taught Russian language at the University of Montenegro for 25 years. At the Lomonosov University he received his doctorate on the subject “Soviet Poetry in the mid-1950s”.

He has published more than 250 scientific and scientific papers, of which 225 are about Russian and more than thirty about contemporary Montenegrin writers.

He died in Podgorica in 2012.