1.
Jakobson, Roman, Rudy, Stephen. Selected writings. ’S-Gravenhage: Mouton; 1962.
2.
Obolensky, Dimitri. Byzantium and the Slavs. Crestwood, N.Y.: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press; 1994.
3.
Obolensky, Dimitri. Six Byzantine portraits. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1988.
4.
Obolensky, Dimitri. Byzantium and the Slavs. Crestwood, N.Y.: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press; 1994.
5.
Birnbaum, Henrik, Vryonis, Speros, International Balkan Conference. Aspects of the Balkans: continuity and change : contributions to the International Balkan Conference held at UCLA, October 23-28, 1969. The Hague: Mouton; 1972.
6.
Matejic, Mateja, Milivojević, Dragan. An Anthology of medieval Serbian literature in English. Columbus, Ohio: Slavica Publishers; 1978.
7.
Matejic, Mateja, Milivojević, Dragan. An Anthology of medieval Serbian literature in English. Columbus, Ohio: Slavica Publishers; 1978.
8.
Beker, Miroslav. Comparative studies in Croatian literature. Zagreb: Zavod za znanost i književnost Filozofskog fakulteta u Zagrebu; 1981.
9.
Vera Javarek. Marin Drzic: A Ragusan Playwright. The Slavonic and East European Review. Modern Humanities Research Association; Vol. 37(No. 88):141–159.
10.
Društvo književnika Hrvatske. Most =: Bridge. Zagreb;
11.
Beker, Miroslav. Comparative studies in Croatian literature. Zagreb: Zavod za znanost i književnost Filozofskog fakulteta u Zagrebu; 1981.
12.
Hall, Stuart, Gieben, Bram, Open University. Formations of modernity. Oxford: Polity in association with Open University; 1992.
13.
Obradović, Dositej, Noyes, George Rapall. The life and adventures of Dimitrije Obradović, who as a monk was given the name Dositej, written and published by himself. Berkeley: University of California Press; 1953.
14.
University of Colorado. East European quarterly. Boulder, CO: University of Colorado; 1967;
15.
University of Colorado. East European quarterly. Boulder, CO: University of Colorado; 1967;
16.
Barbara Widenor Maggs. Reljkovic, Satyrs, and the Enlightenment in Eighteenth-Century Croatia. The Slavic and East European Journal. American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages; Vol. 20(No. 4):437–450.
17.
Koljević, Svetozar. The epic in the making. Oxford: Clarendon; 1980.
18.
University of Colorado. East European quarterly. Boulder, CO: University of Colorado; 1967;
19.
American Association for Southeast European Studies. Balkanistica: a journal of Southeast European studies. Columbus, OH: Slavica Publishers; 1974;
20.
Wilson, Duncan. The life and times of Vuk Stefanović Karadzić, 1787-1864: literacy, literature and national independence in Serbia. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1970.
21.
North American Society for Serbian Studies. Serbian studies. Chicago, Ill: North American Society for Serbian Studies; 1980;
22.
Mihailovich, Vasa D. South Slavic writers before World War II. New York, London: Gale Research; 1995.
23.
E. D. Goy. The Tragic Element in Smrt Smail-age Cengic. The Slavonic and East European Review. Modern Humanities Research Association; Vol. 44(No. 103):327–336.
24.
Beker, Miroslav. Comparative studies in Croatian literature. Zagreb: Zavod za znanost i književnost Filozofskog fakulteta u Zagrebu; 1981.
25.
Milutinović Z. Sword, Priest and Conversion: On Religion and Apostasy in South Slav Literature in the Period of National Revival. Central Europe. 2008 May 1;6(1):17–46.
26.
Mihailovich, Vasa D. South Slavic writers before World War II. New York, London: Gale Research; 1995.
27.
Goy, E. D. The sabre and the song: Njegoš, The mountain wreath. 1st ed. Belgrade: Serbian P.E.N. Centre; 1995.
28.
Kovačević, Dušan. Odabrane drame. Beograd: Stubovi kulture; 1998.
29.
Nušić, Branislav Đ. Odabrane komedije. Novi Sad: Matica Srpska; 1970.
30.
Vojnović, Ivo. Pjesme, pripovijetke, drame. Zagreb: Matica hrvatska; 1964.
31.
Mihailovich, Vasa D. South Slavic writers before World War II. New York, London: Gale Research; 1995.
32.
Beker, Miroslav. Comparative studies in Croatian literature. Zagreb: Zavod za znanost i književnost Filozofskog fakulteta u Zagrebu; 1981.
33.
Mihailovich, Vasa D. South Slavic writers before World War II. New York, London: Gale Research; 1995.
34.
Krleža, Miroslav. Glembajevi - drame. Jubilarno izdanje povodom 80-godišnjice rođenja Miroslava Krleže. Sarajevo: Oslobođenje; 1973.
35.
Mihailovich, Vasa D. South Slavic writers before World War II. New York, London: Gale Research; 1995.
36.
Beker, Miroslav. Comparative studies in Croatian literature. Zagreb: Zavod za znanost i književnost Filozofskog fakulteta u Zagrebu; 1981.
37.
Arsenijević, Vladimir. U potpalublju: cloaca maxima : sapunska opera. Beograd: Rende; 2004.
38.
Norris, David A. In the wake of the Balkan myth: questions of identity and modernity. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1999.
39.
Mihailović, Dragoslav. Kad su cvetale tikve. Beograd: Srpska književna zadruga; 1980.
40.
Hawkesworth, Celia. Literature and politics in Eastern Europe: selected papers from the fourth World Congress for Soviet and East European Studies, Harrogate, 1990. New York: St. Martin’s Press; 1992.
41.
Cornis-Pope, Marcel, Neubauer, John. History of the literary cultures of East-Central Europe: junctures and disjunctures in the 19th and 20th centuries. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Pub; 2004.
42.
Desnica, Vladan. Proljeća Ivana Galeba. Beograd: Nolit; 1982.
43.
Selenić, Slobodan. Ubistvo s predumišljajem. 2. izd. Beograd: Prosveta; 1993.