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Zorica Jevremović Munitić

Zorica Jevremović Munitić
Born Zorica Jevremović
(1948-08-22) August 22, 1948 (age 68)
Ražanj, Serbia, SFR Yugoslavia
Education Faculty of Dramatic Arts in Belgrade (1975)
Occupation Theatre and video director, playwright, theorist, literary historian
Years active 1968–present
Spouse(s) Ranko Munitić (1943-2009)

Zorica Jevremović Munitić (born August 22, 1948 in Ražanj, Serbia, SFR Yugoslavia) is a Serbian theatre and video director, playwright, choreographer, intermedia theorist (film, television, animated film, comic strip), literary historian and feminist. Her work also includes that of a dramaturge in alternative and informal theatrical and film groups.

She is director of the Belgrade Centre for Media "Ranko Munitić" and the editor of a regional journal for media and culture Mediantrop.

Her husband was a prominent Yugoslav cultural worker and media theorist Ranko Munitić.

She obtained her dramaturgy degree in 1975 at the Faculty of Dramatic Arts in Belgrade.

As an advocate of a common Yugoslav cultural milieu she has undertaken research into the cultural history and theological common law in multinational and/or multiconfessional regions of Croatia, Slovenia and Kosovo within former Yugoslavia: Dubrovnik (1976-1980), Perast (1981), Dečani (1985-1989), Tacen (1982-1985), Povlja (1985), Poljica (1986-1990), Zjum (1990).

She was active as a dramaturge in the following key alternative and informal theatre and film groups in former Yugoslavia: KPGT (1980-1990), Art-film (1981-1983), Nova osećajnost (1984-1985), Preduzeće za pozorišne poslove (1992).

She edited the following alternative research collections focused on literary history and published in “Književnost” journal: Sava Mrkalj (1984), St. Sava and Hilandar (1988), Vatroslav Jagić (1990).

She also founded the following alternative theatres that operated as 'neighborhood theatres' in ghettoized communities, in places with no previous history of theatre performances:

Zorica Jevremović has worked with the following marginal groups: Romani children, nuns, psychotics, invalids, blind persons, women who have suffered violence, parentless children, lesbians and women refugees.


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