Første Verdenskrig som erindring i Bosnien, Kroatien og Serbien: fra jugoslaviske til nationale fortællinger

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Standard

Første Verdenskrig som erindring i Bosnien, Kroatien og Serbien : fra jugoslaviske til nationale fortællinger. / Sindbæk, Tea; Dedovic, Ismar.

In: Nordisk Oestforum, Vol. 28, No. 2, 2014, p. 99-118.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Sindbæk, T & Dedovic, I 2014, 'Første Verdenskrig som erindring i Bosnien, Kroatien og Serbien: fra jugoslaviske til nationale fortællinger', Nordisk Oestforum, vol. 28, no. 2, pp. 99-118.

APA

Sindbæk, T., & Dedovic, I. (2014). Første Verdenskrig som erindring i Bosnien, Kroatien og Serbien: fra jugoslaviske til nationale fortællinger. Nordisk Oestforum, 28(2), 99-118.

Vancouver

Sindbæk T, Dedovic I. Første Verdenskrig som erindring i Bosnien, Kroatien og Serbien: fra jugoslaviske til nationale fortællinger. Nordisk Oestforum. 2014;28(2):99-118.

Author

Sindbæk, Tea ; Dedovic, Ismar. / Første Verdenskrig som erindring i Bosnien, Kroatien og Serbien : fra jugoslaviske til nationale fortællinger. In: Nordisk Oestforum. 2014 ; Vol. 28, No. 2. pp. 99-118.

Bibtex

@article{bf7aaabf80974604b44e074427482356,
title = "F{\o}rste Verdenskrig som erindring i Bosnien, Kroatien og Serbien: fra jugoslaviske til nationale fort{\ae}llinger",
abstract = "In this article, we investigate the public memory of the First World War as written into the national histories of Bosnia, Croatia and Serbia in the run-up to the centennial of the outbreak of the War. Assuming that public uses of history are influenced by demands in their present as well as commemorative traditions, we study the First World War in official and semi-official national narratives in the three states and in their Yugoslav predecessors. The main sources of our analyses are schoolbooks and popular history books, supplemented by history debates in the media. First World War memory is both shared and divided: Though a catastrophe everywhere, to Serbia it was a triumph on the allied side, whereas in Bosnia and Croatia it was mainly a state collapse. Yet, the War also provided the conditions for creation of the first Yugoslav state, and consequently war history was narrated within a Yugoslav context. In socialist Yugoslavia, the triumphant Serbian narrative was expanded to include the rest of Yugoslavia and a Marxist interpretation was added. After the fall of Yugoslavia, the Serbian history remains heroic, now with a strictly national focus, while different andless prominent narratives are being created in Croatia and Bosnia.",
keywords = "Det Humanistiske Fakultet, First World War, memory, Yugoslavia, Bosnia, Croatia, Serbia",
author = "Tea Sindb{\ae}k and Ismar Dedovic",
year = "2014",
language = "Dansk",
volume = "28",
pages = "99--118",
journal = "Nordisk Oestforum",
issn = "0801-7220",
publisher = "Universitetsforlaget AS",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Første Verdenskrig som erindring i Bosnien, Kroatien og Serbien

T2 - fra jugoslaviske til nationale fortællinger

AU - Sindbæk, Tea

AU - Dedovic, Ismar

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - In this article, we investigate the public memory of the First World War as written into the national histories of Bosnia, Croatia and Serbia in the run-up to the centennial of the outbreak of the War. Assuming that public uses of history are influenced by demands in their present as well as commemorative traditions, we study the First World War in official and semi-official national narratives in the three states and in their Yugoslav predecessors. The main sources of our analyses are schoolbooks and popular history books, supplemented by history debates in the media. First World War memory is both shared and divided: Though a catastrophe everywhere, to Serbia it was a triumph on the allied side, whereas in Bosnia and Croatia it was mainly a state collapse. Yet, the War also provided the conditions for creation of the first Yugoslav state, and consequently war history was narrated within a Yugoslav context. In socialist Yugoslavia, the triumphant Serbian narrative was expanded to include the rest of Yugoslavia and a Marxist interpretation was added. After the fall of Yugoslavia, the Serbian history remains heroic, now with a strictly national focus, while different andless prominent narratives are being created in Croatia and Bosnia.

AB - In this article, we investigate the public memory of the First World War as written into the national histories of Bosnia, Croatia and Serbia in the run-up to the centennial of the outbreak of the War. Assuming that public uses of history are influenced by demands in their present as well as commemorative traditions, we study the First World War in official and semi-official national narratives in the three states and in their Yugoslav predecessors. The main sources of our analyses are schoolbooks and popular history books, supplemented by history debates in the media. First World War memory is both shared and divided: Though a catastrophe everywhere, to Serbia it was a triumph on the allied side, whereas in Bosnia and Croatia it was mainly a state collapse. Yet, the War also provided the conditions for creation of the first Yugoslav state, and consequently war history was narrated within a Yugoslav context. In socialist Yugoslavia, the triumphant Serbian narrative was expanded to include the rest of Yugoslavia and a Marxist interpretation was added. After the fall of Yugoslavia, the Serbian history remains heroic, now with a strictly national focus, while different andless prominent narratives are being created in Croatia and Bosnia.

KW - Det Humanistiske Fakultet

KW - First World War, memory, Yugoslavia, Bosnia, Croatia, Serbia

UR - https://www.idunn.no/nof/2014/02

M3 - Tidsskriftartikel

VL - 28

SP - 99

EP - 118

JO - Nordisk Oestforum

JF - Nordisk Oestforum

SN - 0801-7220

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 128733876