Description

Book Synopsis

The term “Yugoslavia” first appeared in an article in the newspaper Slovenija in Ljubljana on Friday, October 19, 1849. The author of the article declared that he was not interested in politics, but only in the literary unification of Yugoslavs within the Austro-Hungary Empire. With ongoing conflicts and disparate forms of nationalism in and around historical Yugoslavia as its backdrop, Yugoslavia without Yugoslavs for the first time addresses the history and idea of a united Yugoslavia in and during which a true “Yugoslav” identity never really came into being . Following a series of wars and uprisings from 1875 onwards, the first nation-state of Southern Slavs, established after World War I, became the “Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes” — a competing nationalistic blender that would go through failure, revival and transformation of the concept of “Yugoslavia”.



Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Preface

Introduction: The Naming and Origins of the Yugoslav Idea
Celebrating a Glorious Past
Emancipatory Power of Yugoslav Nationalism
Mobilisation for the Yugoslav Idea
Austria-Hungary Thwarts the Yugoslav Idea
A Volunteer in the Service of the World Revolution
From Villain to National Hero

Chapter 1. In Search of a Path to Yugoslav Unification
Balkan Powder Keg
Divide and Rule
War or Peace?

Chapter 2. Marko Kraljević in the Age of Capitalism
Honouring the Kosovo Pledge
The Balkan Wars and the Dual Monarchy
Slovene Rivers Flow Towards Belgrade
The Quandaries of the Bloody Yugoslav Tragedy
Russian Soldiers Washing Their Feet in the Adriatic Sea

Chapter 3. Turning the Austro-Hungarian Yugoslavs against the Serbs
Vidovdan 1914
All for Faith, Home, and Emperor!
The Language of Ljubljana’s Streets
Teaching Culture with a Steel Fist
Miloš Obilić Has Turned against Marko Kraljević

Chapter 4. The Memory of Fallen Soldiers as a Seed of Discord
From the Kosovo Temple to the Pantheon of the Liberators
Petrified Opanaks and Šajkačas
Stone Soldiers Strike Back
Chaplain France Bonač
Monument to the Unknown Slovene Soldier

Chapter 5. The Father of Modern Yugoslav Idea
Projecting the Present to the Past
A Great Yugoslav and a Small Austrian
The Dilemma of a Yugoslav Anthropologist
Only God Came from Nothing, a Yugoslavs Needed a Creator
Yugoslavism as a Burden

Chapter 6. Creating the New Nation-State
If a Kernel of Wheat Dies, It Produces Many Seeds
The Yugoslav Piedmont
The Nation-State Is Founded, What Shall Its Citizens Be Called?
Пијемонт vs. Piemonte
Symbolic Integration
“The Brother Is Dear Whatever His Faith Is”

Chapter 7. Celebrating the Unity of the Nation with the Three Names
“Slovenes, Serbs, Croats, Forever Brothers to Each Other!”
Rousseauian Pillars of Nationalism
March Separately, Strike Unitedly
Straw that Quickly Burns
A Nation-State without Nationalism

Chapter 8. The Yugoslav Nation-State as a Mosaic, Not a Melting Pot of Peoples
The Argonauts of Yugoslav Nationalism
The Price of Unification
“Yugoslav Bismarck”
King the Unifier
Instrumentalisation of the National Question
“Brotherhod and Unity”

Bibliography

Yugoslavia without Yugoslavs: The History of a

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    A Hardback by Božidar Jezernik

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      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 14/07/2023
      ISBN13: 9781805390435, 978-1805390435
      ISBN10: 1805390430

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      The term “Yugoslavia” first appeared in an article in the newspaper Slovenija in Ljubljana on Friday, October 19, 1849. The author of the article declared that he was not interested in politics, but only in the literary unification of Yugoslavs within the Austro-Hungary Empire. With ongoing conflicts and disparate forms of nationalism in and around historical Yugoslavia as its backdrop, Yugoslavia without Yugoslavs for the first time addresses the history and idea of a united Yugoslavia in and during which a true “Yugoslav” identity never really came into being . Following a series of wars and uprisings from 1875 onwards, the first nation-state of Southern Slavs, established after World War I, became the “Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes” — a competing nationalistic blender that would go through failure, revival and transformation of the concept of “Yugoslavia”.



      Table of Contents

      List of Illustrations
      Preface

      Introduction: The Naming and Origins of the Yugoslav Idea
      Celebrating a Glorious Past
      Emancipatory Power of Yugoslav Nationalism
      Mobilisation for the Yugoslav Idea
      Austria-Hungary Thwarts the Yugoslav Idea
      A Volunteer in the Service of the World Revolution
      From Villain to National Hero

      Chapter 1. In Search of a Path to Yugoslav Unification
      Balkan Powder Keg
      Divide and Rule
      War or Peace?

      Chapter 2. Marko Kraljević in the Age of Capitalism
      Honouring the Kosovo Pledge
      The Balkan Wars and the Dual Monarchy
      Slovene Rivers Flow Towards Belgrade
      The Quandaries of the Bloody Yugoslav Tragedy
      Russian Soldiers Washing Their Feet in the Adriatic Sea

      Chapter 3. Turning the Austro-Hungarian Yugoslavs against the Serbs
      Vidovdan 1914
      All for Faith, Home, and Emperor!
      The Language of Ljubljana’s Streets
      Teaching Culture with a Steel Fist
      Miloš Obilić Has Turned against Marko Kraljević

      Chapter 4. The Memory of Fallen Soldiers as a Seed of Discord
      From the Kosovo Temple to the Pantheon of the Liberators
      Petrified Opanaks and Šajkačas
      Stone Soldiers Strike Back
      Chaplain France Bonač
      Monument to the Unknown Slovene Soldier

      Chapter 5. The Father of Modern Yugoslav Idea
      Projecting the Present to the Past
      A Great Yugoslav and a Small Austrian
      The Dilemma of a Yugoslav Anthropologist
      Only God Came from Nothing, a Yugoslavs Needed a Creator
      Yugoslavism as a Burden

      Chapter 6. Creating the New Nation-State
      If a Kernel of Wheat Dies, It Produces Many Seeds
      The Yugoslav Piedmont
      The Nation-State Is Founded, What Shall Its Citizens Be Called?
      Пијемонт vs. Piemonte
      Symbolic Integration
      “The Brother Is Dear Whatever His Faith Is”

      Chapter 7. Celebrating the Unity of the Nation with the Three Names
      “Slovenes, Serbs, Croats, Forever Brothers to Each Other!”
      Rousseauian Pillars of Nationalism
      March Separately, Strike Unitedly
      Straw that Quickly Burns
      A Nation-State without Nationalism

      Chapter 8. The Yugoslav Nation-State as a Mosaic, Not a Melting Pot of Peoples
      The Argonauts of Yugoslav Nationalism
      The Price of Unification
      “Yugoslav Bismarck”
      King the Unifier
      Instrumentalisation of the National Question
      “Brotherhod and Unity”

      Bibliography

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