45,155 research outputs found

    Letter to the Editor Re: Former Yugoslavia

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    Tourism, conflict and contested heritage in former Yugoslavia

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    Although, historically, there have always been travellers crossing the Balkan Peninsula, Todorova (1994 Todorova, M. (1994). The Balkans: From discovery to invention. Slavic Review, 53, 453–482. doi: 10.2307/2501301) notes that early travellers were usually heading for important centres such as Constantinople or Jerusalem, and considered South-East Europe as a peripheral place where people were just passing through. The region is only really discovered in the eighteenth century along with an increasing interest in the East. More organised forms of tourism appear at the beginning of the nineteenth century, emerging first around railway lines and thermal therapy resources, and then expanding towards the coastlines. A large part of these developments took place in Croatia and the ‘Dalmatian Riviera’, but other regions also experienced the arrival of visitors and the first organised trip in Bosnia was proposed by Thomas Cook & Sons in 1898. It is only after the Second World War, during the rule of Marshall Tito, that tourism really flourished particularly in the period between the 1960s and the 1980s, when the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY) followed an alternative way of development as the rest of the Eastern Bloc. A relative openness to the West allowed the arrival of European tourists and led to forms of mass tourism in some parts of the region (Grandits & Taylor, 2010 Grandits, H., & Taylor, K. (Eds.). (2010). Yugoslavia’s sunny side: A history of tourism and socialism (1950s–1980s). Budapest: CEU Press.). While communist regimes such as Bulgaria and Romania mainly hosted eastern ‘apparatchiks’ on the Black Sea resorts, Yugoslavia and Greece focused on attracting seaside tourists from Western Europe (Cattaruzza & SintĂšs, 2012 Cattaruzza, A., & SintĂšs, P. (2012). Atlas gĂ©opolitique des Balkans. Un autre visage de l'Europe. Paris: Autrement.)

    How Ethnic and Religious Nationalism Threaten the Bosnian State

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    When the wars ceased in the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s, as in the aftermath of other past conflicts in the Balkans, ethnic and religious divisions prevailed. Bosnia Herzegovina is perhaps the most vulnerable of the newly independent states of the former Yugoslavia, partially due to the manner it was established. Ethnic cleansing and discord have marred Bosnia while the three principal ethnoreligious entities continue to struggle to maintain their distinct identity within the context of a convoluted political system wrestling against domestic and international intrigue. Ethnoreligious nationalism threatens to further rupture the Bosnian state and create a renewed state of violence that ultimately endangers this nation’s future

    Protestants in (Former) Yugoslavia

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    Bacevic, Jana (2014). From class to identity / The Politics of education reforms in former Yugoslavia. Budapest - New York: CEU press, 235 pp. [Book review]

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    Book review of: Bacevic, Jana (2014). From class to identity / The Politics of education reforms in former Yugoslavia. Budapest - New York: CEU press, 235 pp. ISBN 978-615-5225-72-

    Orientalism, Balkanism and the Western Viewpoint in the Context of Former Yugoslavia

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    This research paper examines the role of the Orientalist and Balkanist discourse in the Former Yugoslavia with a particular focus on Albanians. Here, Western Orientalist and Balkanist stereotypes of the Former Yugoslavia are examined arguing that the Orientalism and Balkanism of people living in the Former Yugoslavia is and was viewed differently from the standard by the West and by the people living in the Former Yugoslavia in the way how they perceive each other. The first part of this research paper treats the Orientalism and Balkanism in the context of people living in the Former Yugoslavia, in general.The second part of this research paper analyzes the case study of the application of the Orientalist and Balkanist theoretical lenses on one of the nations living in the Former Yugoslavia, namely Albanians. Here, some explorations and thoughts are provided on how Albanians define themselves and how they were perceived by the South Slavic majority living in the Former Yugoslavia.There are three authors and, subsequently, three seminal works that shall serve as pillars of this theoretical analysis: concepts of Edward Said’s “Orientalism,” Bakic-Hayden’s theories on Orientalist variations and nesting Orientalism, and Maria Todorova’s ground-breaking analysis of the external practices of Balkans representation. These provide a useful theoretical framework through which to explore the distribution of the Orientalist and Balkanist discourses in Former Yugoslavia

    The Churches of Former Yugoslavia

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    Identity building practices in former Yugoslavia

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    [Abstract] My proposal for our panel concerns a particular kind of political practices, namely public demonstration and procession developed, in different ways, in each Yugoslavian republic during the 80s and the 90s. This point of view, apart from permitting an interesting deepening in semiotic studies of these topics, could at least answer to the question: is a demonstration in itself a source of identity? In example, the difference between the style and the course of demonstrations in Serbia (the famous Miloơevic’s mitintsi), in Slovenia or in other countries, could be interpreted as the manifestation of a different trajectory of identification for these national identities? This perspective could develop a significant insight in the processes of identitybuilding in a situation of crisis, and in its relation with the construction of new political practices. This research will be performed by instruments provided by latest sociosemiotic and cultural studies, aware that a tight dialogue between different disciplines is the key for a better understanding of these event

    A Note on Poverty in Kosovo

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    Kosovo is a war-torn corner of the former Yugoslavia, where a civil war between ethnic Albanians and ethnic Serbs raged during most of the 1990s. We examine the incidence and depth of poverty and some of its correlates in post-conflict Kosovo using the Living Standards Measurement Survey.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/40193/3/wp807.pd
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