Sadly, our long-time collaborator and friend, Jonathan Bousfield, passed away this April, leaving behind an enormous hole in the local cultural scene.
Over the years we have liberally linked to various articles from Jon’s excellent blog, Stray Satellite, here on Critical Mass because quite simply there was nothing else like it. Stray Satellite is an impressive kaleidoscope of various topics mainly focused on Croatia and the greater Eastern Europe region, ranging from alternative and pop culture to music, history, travel, literary and film reviews, social movements, and more.
Jon was British, he was born and raised in Leeds, but he had been living in Croatia for the last 20 years. Starting with family camping trips to Yugoslavia in the 1970s, he was drawn to this region and eventually settled in Zagreb. He had a family here and completely integrated into the culture, achieving enough fluency in Croatian to translate fiction. He also surrounded himself with local intellectuals, writers, artists and musicians to such a degree that he firmly had his finger on the pulse of the undercurrent of alternative culture in this region from the 1980s onwards.
Jon was foremost a historian but also a kind of scholar of all trades. He made his name as a travel writer, writing the Rough Guide book for Croatia and co-writing many other Rough Guide books, but he also did stints as a rock journalist, and published many articles as a freelance journalist in local and international publications including Jutarnji List, Globus, Svijet kulture, Time Out Croatia, Calvert Journal, and New Eastern Europe among others. His articles and essays display a sophisticated, scholarly command of many topics from history to alternative and pop culture to music, literature, architecture, art and design to name a few. Jon also published a graphic novel, Crimson Quays (Grimizna Laguna in Croatian), in collaboration with local legendary comic strip illustrator Igor Hofbauer. It can be described as a subversive look at the dystopian underbelly of man’s wanderlust search for escape in the form of the vacation and travel industry and is also a darkly satirical take on what humans are searching for when they pine for escape.
There was no one quite like Jon. He was a brilliant but modest thinker and writer who straddled two cultures, exploring the lesser known parts of a foreign culture from a unique perspective. Jon expertly translated cultural, historical and social nuances of this region not only to foreigners but also to locals. His perspective was impressively informed and honed over years of learning about, observing, and immersing himself in the local cultural scene. Some of Jon’s most recent articles which appear on his website, Stray Satellite, include: a personal reflection on colonialism, specifically describing his grandfather’s attendance of a famous football match, the first to be played at the newly built Wembley Stadium, which then segues into his grandfather’s service in colonial wars abroad and how the mementos from these far away places affected Jon as a child, a review of new weird Croatian fiction, an article on how Jugoton was a cultural and artistic force for Zagreb during the time of Yugoslavia, an overview of the Singing Revolution of the Baltic States in the 1980s, a historical look at Kupari, the early 20th century Czech paradise on the Adriatic, and a meditation on Kundera and how to define the cultural space of Central Europe, among others.
With his impressive output and inimitable grasp of various cultural topics in this region, Jon was truly one of a kind and will be greatly missed. He leaves behind a wife and two young sons in Zagreb.
You can read many of his articles on his blog, Stray Satellite, here
You can find his graphic novel, Grimizna Laguna, in Croatian here
And in English, (Crimson Quays), here
Croatia is a small, charming country known today as a prime European tourist destination. However, it has a complicated often turbulent history and is seemingly always destined to be at the crossroads of empires, religions and worldviews, with its current identity and culture incorporating elements from its former Communist, Slavic, Austrian-Hungarian, Catholic, Mediterranean, and European traditions.
Dubravka Ugrešić is one of the most internationally recognizable writers from Croatia, but she has a contentious relationship with her home country, having gone into self-exile in the early 90s. Her recently translated collection of essays, The Age of Skin, touches on topics of of exile and displacement, among others. Read a review of Ugrešić’s latest work of non-fiction, expertly translated by Ellen Elias-Bursac, in the link below .
Read a review of Neva Lukić's collection of short stories, Endless Endings, recently translated into English, in World Literature Today.
Zagreb has its fair share of graffiti, often startling passersby when it pops up on say a crumbling fortress wall in the historical center of the city. Along with some well-known street murals are the legendary street artists themselves. Check out the article below for a definitive guide to Zagreb's best street art.
The colorful, eclectic and much beloved Croatian children's cartoon Professor Balthazar was created by Zlatko Grgić and produced from the late 1960s through the 1970s. Now newer generations will be able to enjoy the Professor's magic, whether they speak Croatian or English.
Robert Prosinečki's long and fabled football career includes winning third place in the 1998 World Cup as part of the Croatian national team, stints in Real Madrid and FC Barcelona as well as managerial roles for the Croatian national team, Red Star Belgrade, the Azerbaijani national team and the Bosnian Hercegovinian national team.
From strange tales of mysterious murders to suspected criminals hiding out to scams, duels and gambling, Opatija, a favourite seaside escape for Central Europeans at the turn of the last century, routinely filled Austrian headlines and the public's imagination in the early 20th century.
Hailed as the father of 20th century Croatian children's literature, Grigor Vitez (1911-1966) is well known and loved in his homeland. With a new English translation of one of his classic tales AntonTon (AntunTun in Croatian), children around the world can now experience the author's delightful depiction of the strong-minded and silly AntonTon. The Grigor Vitez Award is an annual prize given to the best Croatian children's book of the year.
Have an overabundance of free time, thanks to the pandemic and lockdowns? Yearning to travel but unable to do so safely? Discover the rhythm of life and thought in multiple Eastern European countries through exciting new literature translated into English. From war-torn Ukraine to tales from Gulag inmates to the search for identity by Eastern Europeans driven away from their home countries because of the economic or political situations but still drawn back to their cultural hearths, this list offers many new worlds to explore.
Explore TimeOut's gallery of fascinating and at times thought-provoking art in the great open air gallery of the streets of Zagreb.
Partied too hard last night? Drop by Zagreb's Hangover Museum to feel more normal. People share their craziest hangover stories and visitors can even try on beer goggles to experience how the world looks like through drunken eyes.
How will the futuristic world of 2060 look? How far will technology have advanced, and how will those advancements affect how we live our everyday lives? These are the questions the Zagreb-based magazine Globus asked in a series of articles in 1960, when conceptualizing what advancements society would make 40 years in the future, the then far-off year of 2000. The articles used fantastical predictions about the future to highlight the technological advancements already made by the then socialist Yugoslavia. Take a trip with guide, Jonathan Bousfield, back to the future as envisioned by journalists in 1960s Yugoslavia.
What’s the best way for an open-minded foreigner to get straight to the heart of another culture and get a feel for what makes people tick? Don’t just sample the local food and drink and see the major sights, perk up your ears and listen. There’s nothing that gives away the local flavor of a culture more than the common phrases people use, especially ones that have no direct translation.
Check out a quirky list of untranslatable Croatian phrases from Croatian cultural guide extraordinaire, Andrea Pisac, in the link below:
Just got out of a serious relationship and don't know what to do with all those keepsakes and mementos of your former loved one? The very popular and probably most unique museum in Zagreb, the Museum of Broken Relationships, dedicated to preserving keepsakes alongside the diverse stories of relationships gone wrong, will gladly take them. Find out how the museum got started and take an in-depth look at some of its quirkiest pieces in the link below.
Zagreb is Croatia’s relaxed, charming and pedestrian-friendly capital. Check out Time Out’s definitive Zagreb guide for a diverse set of options of what to explore in the city from unusual museums to legendary flea markets and everything in between.
Diocletian’s Palace is the main attraction in Split, the heart and soul of the city. Because of the palace, Split’s city center can be described as a living museum and it draws in the thousands of tourists that visit the city annually. But how much do we really know about the palace’s namesake who built it, the last ruler of a receding empire? Jonathan Bousfield contends that history only gives us a partial answer.
Cities have served as sources of inspiration, frustration, and discovery for millennia. The subject of sonnets, stories, plays, the power centers of entire cultures, hotbeds of innovation, and the cause of wars, cities are mainstays of the present and the future with millions more people flocking to them every year.
Let the poet, Zagreb native Tomica Bajsić, take you on a lyrical tour of the city. Walk the streets conjured by his graceful words and take in the gentle beauty of the Zagreb of his childhood memories and present day observation.
Dolac, the main city market, is a Zagreb institution. Selling all the fresh ingredients you need to whip up a fabulous dinner, from fruits and vegetables to fish, meat and homemade cheese and sausages, the sellers come from all over Croatia. Positioned right above the main square, the colorful market is a beacon of a simpler way of life and is just as bustling as it was a century ago.
Do you find phrases and sayings give personality and flair to a language? Have you ever pondered how the culture and history of a place shape the common phrases? Check out some common sayings in Croatian with their literal translations and actual meanings below.
Discover Croatia’s rich archaeological secrets, from the well known ancient Roman city of Salona near Split or the Neanderthal museum in Krapina to the often overlooked Andautonia Archaeological Park, just outside of Zagreb, which boasts the excavated ruins of a Roman town or the oldest continuously inhabited town in Europe, Vinkovci.
A little know fact is that Croatia, together with Spain, have the most cultural and historical heritage under the protection of UNESCO, and Croatia has the highest number of UNESCO intangible goods of any European country.
The National Theater in Zagreb, Croatia’s capital, is one of those things which always finds its way to every visitor’s busy schedule.
So you're visiting Zagreb and are curious about it's underground art scene? Check out this guide to Zagreb's street art and explore all the best graffiti artists' work for yourself on your next walk through the city.
Numerous festivals, shows and exhibitions are held annually in Zagreb. Search our what's on guide to arts & entertainment.