Chapter 5 The Bridges Over the Miljacka : The Long Farewell to Yugoslav Citizenship

Ć tiks, Igor

Chapter 5 The Bridges Over the Miljacka : The Long Farewell to Yugoslav Citizenship - London Bloomsbury Academic 2015 - 1 electronic resource (89-100 p.)

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or 'conglomerate' - all occurring in Yugoslavia from mid-1960s at a sometimes vertiginous pace - seem to be interactive parts of the same puzzle. Nevertheless, immediately after the war it appeared that resurrected Yugoslavia and strong patriotism of the national-liberation struggle had given a new impetus to Yugoslavism - this time in a federalist form meant to dissociate the idea from the bitter experiences of pre-war unitarism. Although Yugoslavism itself went through curious re-definitions and had to compete with communist internationalism between 1945 and 1948, socialist nation-building Yugoslavism would be seen and promoted throughout the 1950s as something of uncontested worth. Having described earlier the birth and evolution of Yugoslavism between the mid-nineteenth century and the Second World War, we should recount here its last chapters.


Creative Commons


English

9781474221559.ch-006

10.5040/9781474221559.ch-006 doi


Society & social sciences
Politics & government

nationalism violence membership culture yugoslav writers yugoslavism belonging disintegration crisis identity nationalism violence membership culture yugoslav writers yugoslavism belonging disintegration crisis identity Ethnic nationalism Josip Broz Tito Kingdom of Yugoslavia Serbs Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia South Slavs

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