Draginja AdamovićW
Draginja Adamović

Draginja Adamović was a Serbian poet.

Mira AlečkovićW
Mira Alečković

Mira Alečković was a Serbian and Yugoslav poet.

Jelena DimitrijevićW
Jelena Dimitrijević

Jelena Dimitrijević was a Serbian short story writer, novelist, poet, traveller, social worker, feminist, and a polyglot. She is considered to be the first woman in modern Serbian history to publish a work of travel related prose in 1894.

Gordana ĐilasW
Gordana Đilas

Gordana Đilas is a Serbian poet, librarian and bibliographer.

Maja Herman SekulićW
Maja Herman Sekulić

Maja Herman Sekulić is a Serbian poet, novelist, essayist and translator.

Jasmina HolbusW
Jasmina Holbus

Jasmina Holbus is a Serbian stage designer, poet and interior designer. She graduated from Chelsea Collage of Art & Design in London, department of Interior Design in 1996. She is a member of the Association of Writers of Serbia since 1993 and the Association of Fine Arts Artists and Designers of Serbia since 2007, holding the status of an independent artist.

Ana IlićW
Ana Ilić

Ana Ilić is a Serbian poet and student of philosophy from Vladičin Han. She is one of the rare people in Serbia who suffers from Friedreich's ataxia.

Ljubica Ivošević DimitrovW
Ljubica Ivošević Dimitrov

Ljubica Ivošević Dimitrov was a Serbian and Bulgarian textile worker, labour activist, newspaper editor and the first Serbian proletarian poet.

Marija KneževićW
Marija Knežević

Marija Knežević, a Serbian poet, fiction writer, essayist, literary translator and professor of literature was born in Belgrade, Serbia, in 1963.

Tanja KragujevićW
Tanja Kragujević

Tanja Kragujević, a Serbian poet, was born in 1946. in Senta, northern Vojvodina. She has been a member of the Serbian Literary Society since its foundation in 2001. By the decision of the Government of Serbia, 24 December 2009, she was awarded the title of top artists in the field of literature. She lives in Zemun.

Eleonora LuthanderW
Eleonora Luthander

Eleonora Luthander, is a Swedish and Serbian poet and translator.

Desanka MaksimovićW
Desanka Maksimović

Desanka Maksimović was a Serbian poet, writer and translator. Her first works were published in the literary journal Misao in 1920, while she was studying at the University of Belgrade. Within a few years, her poems appeared in the Serbian Literary Herald, Belgrade's most influential literary publication. In 1925, Maksimović earned a French Government scholarship for a year's study at the University of Paris. Upon her return, she was appointed a professor at Belgrade's elite First High School for Girls, a position she would hold continuously until World War II.

Jovanka NikolićW
Jovanka Nikolić

Jovanka Nikolić was a Serbian author of prose, poetry and poetry for children.

Milena Pavlović-BariliW
Milena Pavlović-Barili

Milena Pavlović-Barili was a Serbian painter and poet. She is the most notable female artist of Serbian modernism.

Nevenka PetrićW
Nevenka Petrić

Nevenka Petrić was a Serbian writer, poet, educationalist, and expert in the fields of family planning and gender relations. She joined the Partisans at the age of 14. She became a youth leader and then a head of Health and Social Policy in Yugoslavian local government. She was a member of the Yugoslav women's assembly, secretary of the Conference for Social Activity of Yugoslav Women (1961–69), and president of the Family Planning Council of Yugoslavia (1968–76). She represented Europe on the Central Council of the International Planned Parenthood Federation, and was president of that body's European committee for education. She assisted the United Nations Population Fund's research projects and also directed a UN course on gender relations and parenthood for students from developing countries.

Mirjana StefanovićW
Mirjana Stefanović

Mirjana Stefanović is a Serbian writer.

Milica Stojadinović-SrpkinjaW
Milica Stojadinović-Srpkinja

Milica Stojadinovic-Srpkinja (1828–1878) was arguably the greatest female Serbian poet of the 19th century.

Vukosava VelimirovićW
Vukosava Velimirović

Vukosava Vuka Velimirović was the first Serbian female sculptor, children's writer, illustrator, art critic and translator. She was among the most notable sculptors of 20th century, gaining international recognition between two world wars.