Košutić was the sister of Croatian politician August Košutić. She graduated pedagogy at the University of Zagreb. She was editor-in-chief of Croatian Women's Journal (1939–1944) and lector in the Croatian Publishing Institute, Vjesnik and Seljačka sloga. As one of the founders of the Croatian Writers' Association, Košutić's work was labeled as anti-governmental; after refusing to sign the capital punishment verdict at the show trial[3] directed against Cardinal Stepinac in 1946, she was fired from the Croatian Publishing Institute.[4]
Work
Košutić was a lyricist, developing her fundamental idea of the aspiration of the human soul to God. Her poetry expressed Christian contemplative and metaphysical preoccupations, which is permeated with seeking a meaning in the mutual expression of love among men and God.[1] Her best lyrical works come in form of the prose poem (the dialogical collection of poems K svitanju, 1927).[1][5] Her patriotic poetry works are authentic and deprived of pathos.[1]
She wrote for numerous periodicals,[6] including literary revues (Književnik, Hrvatska prosvjeta, Dom i svijet), Catholic and Croatian emigrant periodicals.
^Videk, Nevenka (2009). "Sida Košutić". Croatian Bibliographical Lexicon (in Croatian).
^Maraković, Ljubomir. "O drami k svitanju". Hrvatska prosvjeta, 15 (1928) 1/2, p. 46-47.
^Those periodicals include: Novi čovjek (1926-27), Hrvatska prosvjeta (1927 –30, 1933–35, 1937–39), Književnik (1929), Hrvatska straža (1930, 1933 1938), Za vjeru i dom (1930–33, 1944), Hrvatska smotra (1933, 1935–37, 1939), Obitelj (1933, 1938, 1944), Glasnik sv. Ante (1934–37), Omladina (1934 –35, 1937–38), Kalendar sv. Ante (1935–41, 1943), Hrvatska revija (1936–40; Buenos Aires 1951; München 1968, 1975), Hrvatski dnevnik (1936–39), Kalendar Gospine krunice (1936), Danica (1938), Napredak (1938–39), Novi ženski list (1938–39), Morgenblatt (1939–40), Dom i svijet (1940), Hrvatski orač (1940), Hrvatska mladost (1943–44) and Glasnik bl. Nikole Tavelića (1944). Her works were posthumously published in literary revue Marulić (1982, 1992) and magazine Hrvatsko zagorje (1997, 2001). Source: Croatian Bibliographical Lexicon.