Bibliography |
MENTIONED IN: - Slavica Garonja-Radovanac, Zena u srpskoj knjizevnosti [Woman in Serbian Literature], Novi Sad 2010. cf. - Celia Hawkesworth, Voices in the Shadows. Women and Verbal Art in Serbia and Bosnia, CEU, Budapest 2000, p. 99-100. -Golub Dobrasinovic, Mina Karadzic Vukomanovic, Beograd 2004. - J. Saulic, Vuk i porodica [Vuk and his Family], Strucna knjiga, Beograd 1988. - Vojislava Latkovic, Mina, Vukova kci [Mina, the daughter of Vuk], Beoknjiga, Beograd [Belgrade] 2005. - Magdalena Koch, ...kiedy dojrzejemy jako kultura... Tworczosc pisarek serbskich na poczatku XX wieku (kanon-genre-gender) [...when we mature as a culture...Early 20th-century Serbian Women's writings (canon-genre-gender), Wroclaw 2007, p. 34. Her correspondence with Stojadinovic has been published in 1987. Prepiska Milica - Vuk - Mina [Correspondence Milica - Vuk - Mina]: the book is a collection of the correspondence of Milica Stojadinovic, Mina Karadzic and Vuk Stefanovic Karadzic. The letters were written between 1854-1868. info MKoch. svdmay11 The monography book of her paintings (reproductions) was recently published (Belgrade, 1997) with the note of Golub Dobrasinovic. info VDjuric svdfebruary13 |
Provisional Notes |
Born in Vienna, her father Vuk Stefanovic Karadzic was Serbian and her mother Anna Krause was Austrian. She was bilingual (spoke German and Serbian), knew Russian and French. in 1858 she married Aleksa Vukomanovic with whom she had a son Janko Vukomanovic. After one year of marriage she became a widow (her husband died of tuberculosis). She also lost her son - he died in St. Petersburg at the age of 19.
Info Juliana Jovicic
svdfeb10
mk 14 Oct 2010
After death, Mina's body was transferred and first burried in Belgrade, Serbia, and later moved to the family tumb in Savinac, Serbia. (Information taken from the Wikipedia). SNJuly12
Checked with CERL |