imagined communities and real victims: self-determination and ethnic cleansing in Yugoslavia (original) (raw)

2002, Genocide: An Anthropological Reader

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Tracing the decline of Yugoslav identity: A case for 'invisible' ethnic cleansing

This essay explores the concept of invisible ethnic cleansing by examining the remaining group of self-identifying Yugoslavs who continue to identify themselves as such despite the break-up of Yugoslavia, the country that shaped and constituted the focal point of their identity. The analysis argues that the lack of recognition of the Yugoslav identity during the country's disintegration as well as afterwards in the individual republics befitted the new nationalistic and distinctly anti-Yugoslav narratives adopted by individual post-Yugoslav republics. The sheer existence and acknowledgment of the Yugoslav identity could therefore disprove the new nationalistic tenets. The essay begins by setting up an analytical framework for the study of invisible ethnic cleansing and Yugoslav identity by examining the concepts of ethnic cleansing, nationalism, group destruction and ethnicity. It goes on to establish the historical background for Yugoslavia's break up and looks at Yugoslavia's 'nationalities policy', the break up itself and the role of the West and the Western media. Finally, the study identifies the hegemonic power of current nation-states reflected in the media, education and government-sponsored intellectual efforts, as those that control the image of the past can erase from it the memory of the disappeared states and the identities connected to them. The bulk of the analysis and the conclusions drawn were based on personal memories and accounts of self-identifying Yugoslavs in order to preserve the memories of marginalized and forgotten groups as well as to stress the importance of counter-memory, which can challenge the narrative promoted by dominant groups and oppressive states. Moreover, the novel concept of invisible ethnic cleansing introduced will allow scholars to examine the loss of supranational identities, which accompany the dissolutions of multinational states.

Postwar 'Ethnic Cleansing' in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina (2012) (Unpublished Paper)

The 1991-95 wars of Yugoslav dissolution featured a substantial degree of ethnic cleansing. Though most often associated with state projects of expansion or control through ethno-demographic reengineering, ethnic cleansing may also signify related postconflict trends towards the creation or enhancement of ethno-demographic majorities in particular territorial areas. Many departed not through direct experience with violence but in light of its residual effects, particularly discrimination occurring in the aftermath of war. This paper outlines what might be termed a second major 'wave' or period of ethnic cleansing taking place after the conflicts in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina, one occurring only partly owing to authorities' efforts to block minority return. Also considered is why the issue of minority returns has diminished in political significance.

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