Janko Kersnik

slovenski pravnik, notar in narodni gospodar
The basics

Quick Facts

Introslovenski pravnik, notar in narodni gospodar
PlacesAustria-Hungary Serbia Croatia Slovenia
wasJurist Notary
Work fieldLaw
Gender
Male
Birth28 December 1881, Brdo pri Lukovici
Death26 February 1937Ljubljana (aged 55 years)
Family
Father:Janko Kersnik
The details

Biography

Janko Kersnik (4 September 1852 – 28 July 1897) was a Slovene writer and politician. Together with Josip Jurčič, he is considered the most important representative of literary realism in the Slovene language.

Biography

Ruins of Brdo Manor

Kersnik was born in Brdo Manor near Lukovica in Upper Carniola, then part of the Austrian Duchy of Carniola (now in Slovenia). His father Jože Kersnik was a district judge, while his mother Berta Höffern was a local noblewoman. Kersnik grew up in a bilingual, German-Slovene environment. He attended the German-language grammar school in Ljubljana, but was expelled under accusations of Slovene nationalism. He continued his studies under the private tutorship of Fran Levec, an influential Young Slovene literary historian.

He studied law at the University of Vienna and Graz, where he graduated in 1874. He worked in the Austro-Hungarian administration in Ljubljana between 1874 and 1878, where he opened a civil law notary office in his native Brdo pri Lukovici.

In the late 1870s, he became active in politics in the liberal Young Slovene party. In 1883, he was elected to the Carniolan provincial diet. Together with Fran Šuklje, He belonged to the moderate faction of the Slovene Liberals, and opposed both the conservatism of the Old Slovenes, the centralism of Austrian liberals, and the Slovene radical national liberalism, advocated by Ivan Hribar and Ivan Tavčar.

He died in Ljubljana in 1897.

Literary work

Kersnik started his literary career as a German language poet. Under the influence of Slovene post-Romantic authors Josip Stritar and Simon Jenko, he began writing in Slovene. He first wrote in late Romantic style, but under the influence of his personal friend Josip Jurčič, he switched to literary realism. He was a prolific author of short stories, feuilletons, and satires, in which he critically assessed the backwardness of the Slovene Lands of his time, and the radicalization of political life.

Sources

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 17 Aug 2019. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.