Igor à  tiks (born 17 September 1977) is a Bosnian and Croatian novelist and political philosopher. As an academic, à  tiks works as a research associate at the University of Edinburgh. His novels The Judgment of Richard Richter and A Castle in Romagna have earned him multiple awards; the former has been translated into 15 languages.
Igor à  tiks was born in Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina, in 1977. During the Yugoslav wars he fled to Croatia and currently lives in Belgrade, Serbia. He has also lived in Paris, Chicago, Edinburgh, and Graz.
He earned his PhD at the Institut dâÂÂÃÂtudes Politiques de Paris and Northwestern University and later worked and taught at the University of Edinburgh and the Faculty of Media and Communications in Belgrade.
His first novel, A Castle in Romagna (Dvorac u Romagni), won the Slaviàprize for best first novel in Croatia and was nominated for the IMPAC International Dublin Literary Award for 2006. His second novel The Judgment of Richard Richter, originally published as Elijah's Chair (Elijahova stolica), won the Gjalski and Kiklop Awards for the best novel in Croatia in 2006 and has been translated into fifteen languages including German, Spanish, French, Dutch, Italian, Polish, Czech, Hungarian, Slovenian, Bulgarian, Macedonian, Finnish, Ukrainian and Arabic. In 2017 he published his third novel originally titled Rezalià ¡te.
In his scholarly work, Ã Â tiks investigated the topic of citizenship and nationalism in Yugoslavia and the Balkans. Besides many scholarly articles and edited volumes, Ã Â tiks published a monograph, Nations and Citizens in Yugoslavia and the Post-Yugoslav States: One Hundred Years of Citizenship (2015). Along with Jo Shaw, he edited the collections Citizenship after Yugoslavia (2013) and Citizenship Rights (2013), and, with SreÃÂko Horvat, Welcome to the Desert of Post-Socialism (2015). Ã Â tiks was honored with the prestigious French distinction Chevalier des arts et des lettres for his literary and intellectual achievements.
In addition to winning the Grand Prix of the 2011 Belgrade International Theater Festival for his stage adaptation of Elijah's Chair, à  tiks wrote two more plays, Flour in the Veins and Zrenjanin. All three plays were put on stage by one of the leading post-Yugoslav theater directors Boris Lijeà ¡eviÃÂ.
In 2017, Ã Â tiks signed the Declaration on the Common Language of the Croats, Serbs, Bosniaks and Montenegrins.
à  tiks is married to Dr. Jelena Vasiljevic, who is a research associate at the Institute for Philosophy and Social Theory at University of Belgrade. They live in Belgrade and have a son.