Bosnische Post: A Newspaper in Sarajevo, 1884–1903 (original) (raw)
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Bosnia remains a divided country both politically, and in the representation and memorialisation of the past. This paper is based on fieldwork in Sarajevo at the hundredth anniversary of the Sarajevo assassination widely seen as the catalyst for the First World War. The antithetical, competing commemorations of this historical event tell us a great deal about the political fractures of Bosnia and the region. They also offer insights into the significance of historical memory in the stubborn reiteration of contemporary identities.
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2020
A series of essays reassessing the causes and results of the Sarajevo murders of June 1914. The book especially seeks to explore the wider Balkan and international contexts, with contributions from historians from different disciplinary approaches. It also argues for the South Slav Question as a cause of the First World War due to the prominence given to this in the thinking of the Habsburg elite
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This article examines the development of Sarajevo into a modern city. In the 1870s, Austro-Hungarian planners embarked on a mission to redesign the city's centre of Sarajevo. Rendering the city resilient against natural disasters, they uprooted what André Corboz called the 'territorial processes' of destruction and renewal that had shaped Ottoman Sarajevo. Drawing on Corboz's theories, this paper argues that modern European urban engendered an intangible but irreversible challenge to the old Ottoman city.
ACTA FILOLÓGICA POR LA CAUSA 174/4, 2014
This publication by LA FILOLÓGICA POR LA CAUSA is a follow-up to the Master of Architecture Thesis from 2011, Balkan Reconciliation Centers, by KEVIN ROSS LIKINS. The author and director of LFPLC, Mark Karamian who also acted as Thesis Topic Advisor decided in 2015 to publish this brief on the architectural updates and restoration of the National Library of Bosnia-Herzegovina that was completed in 2014 by URBING Studio in Sarajevo. The paper covers of the history of the architects of Vijećnica City Hall, the history of Sarajevo's two most notable Library's, and the history of those library's lost and surviving books and manuscripts.
Tribute to Vladimir Dedijer (Belgrade, February 4, 1914 - Tivoli, New York, 30 November / 1 December 1990), twenty-five years since he had passed away. Vladimir Dedijer was a reporter in the Yugoslavia’s newspaper Politika (Belgrade) and it’s special correspondent from Slovenia, Scandinavia, Poland and England during the 1930ties, translator (from English to Serbian) of The Good Earth, three volumes novel by Pearl Buck, as well as translator (from English to Serbian) of some of Walt Disney’s comics; during the Spanish Civil War, Vladimir Dedijer was Politika ’s war reporter from the battlefield of the Segunda República Española, the Second Spanish Republic, and it’s Popular Front government in Catalonia and the Basque Country in 1936. Vladimir Dedijer was a Yugoslav partisan since 1941, three times wounded Yugoslav partisan officer and a man of a particularly sensitive diplomatic missions of the Supreme Headquarters of the National Liberation Army of Yugoslavia (officially the National Liberation Army and Partisan Detachments of Yugoslavia) lead by Supreme Commander Marshal Josip Broz Tito during the WWII, and a man of a particularly sensitive diplomatic missions of the Yugoslav government and the Yugoslav Communist Party after the WWII. Vladimir Dedijer is the author of The War Diary 1941 - 1944, chronicler and historian of the Yugoslav War of Liberation and Revolution; he was a member of the Yugoslav delegation to the funding meeting of the UN and permanent Yugoslav delegate in the Committee on Economic, Social and Humanitarian Affairs of the UN; he was a man from the very top of the Yugoslav government, one of the closest associates of Josip Broz Tito and his biographer, doctor of law, historian and university professors who was excluded from public life after the political and judicial processes in the „Đilas - Dedijer case” 1954 - 1955; he was erudite and polyglot who was fluent in several languages; as university professor, he taught modern history at Oxford University, Harvard, MIT, Ann Arbor, Brandeis, etc. Vladimir Dedijer was founding and permanent member, chairman of session, and president of the International War Crimes Tribunal aka the Russell’s Tribunal (founded in 1966 by Bertrand Russell, Jean-Paul Sartre and Vladimir Dedijer); he was a regular member of the Serbian Academy of Science and Arts, Belgrade, and the chairman of it’s Committee for the collection of materials on the genocide against the Serbs and other peoples of Yugoslavia in World War II. Vladimir Dedijer was a great worker, a great author, a great fighter, and a great traveler – he was “a poet and a revolutionary”, as Judy Stone said in 1971. As a great guardian of the historical truth, Vladimir Dedijer is the author of an entire library of books without which it is impossible to understand world history, Serbian and Yugoslav history particularly – Dnevnik 1941 - 1944, I-III (The War Diary 1941 - 1944, I-III), 1945, 1946, 1950; Josip Broz Tito. Prilozi za biografiju (Tito Speaks: His Self-portrait and Struggle with Stalin), 1953; The Road to Sarajevo (Sarajevo 1914), 1966; Istorija Jugoslavije (History of Yugoslavia), co-author with I. Božić, S. Ćirković, M. Ekmečić, 1972; Sarajevo 1914, I-II, 1978; Interesne sfere. Istorija interesnih sfera i tajne diplomatije uopšte, a posebno Jugoslavije u Drugom svetskom ratu (The Spheres of Interest. The History of Spheres of Interest and Secret Diplomacy in General, and especially of Yugoslavia in World War II), 1980; Novi prilozi za biografiju Josipa Broza Tita, I-III (New Contributions to the Biography of Josip Broz Tito, 1-3), 1980, 1981, 1984; Vatikan i Jasenovac-Dokumenti (Vatican and Jasenovac-Documents, Jasenovac. Das jugoslawische Auschwitz und der Vatikan, The Yugoslav Auschwitz and the Vatican), 1987, 1988, 1992… etc. Vladimir Dedijer was a great martyr also, one of the world's most significant human rights activists and guardian of the rights of the oppressed people in the second half of the 20th century. Vladimir Dedijer was a Serb from Herzegovina - Serb “from the bottom of the vat”, as he spoke - a Yugoslav and a citizen of the world, who was traveling across the mine stage of the world affairs as a free man, self-conscious and sovereign, because he knew who he was, where he came from and where he was going, because he knew that one who wants “to win, must be an artist and a conspirator, have a talent for fighting and suffering, be a martyr and a conspirer, a man of Western manners and an outlaw rebel in same time”, as it was advised by Vladimir Gaćinović, a friend and a comrade of Vladimir Dedijer’s father Professor Jevto Dedijer PhD.
The analysis is devoted to the city of Sarajevo and its turbulent history as being an illustrative case for how political borders have been symbolically reconstructed on ethnic lines in the Balkans for the last five centuries. Key historical periods such as the Austro-Hungarian period, the Kingdom of Yugoslavia and next the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, the Olympic Games, the war and the Dayton Peace Agreement including its aftermath shall be discussed in turn. Some of the most significant events that have shaped the history of the 20th century have directly marked the city of Sarajevo and they tackle some of the most intricate issues that dominate European history as a whole such as national belonging, political ideologies, and religious beliefs. Several milestones can be traced in this regard: the beginning of the first World War, the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, the second World War, Tito's political vision and the prosperous era of socialist Yugoslavia, the dissolution of Yugoslavia and violent ethnic war, the period of peace building and post- conflict reconstruction which is still ongoing. The aim of the study is to analyse the events and patterns which might have contributed to changes in Bosnia and Herzegovina’s capital city. The main argument that the analysis tries to put forward is that the post-conflict Sarajevo's governance structure has maintained and institutionalised the ethnic divisions and political differences in the country and city’s reality.
DEOSMANISATION OF BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA BETWEEN 1878 A ND 1918 ON THE EXAMPLE OF SARAJEVO
Acta Polonie Historica, 2022
In 1878, Austria-Hungary received a mandate in Berlin to exercise power in Bosnia and Herzegovina. During this period, they pursued a policy of deosmanisation and Europeanisation of the country. Vienna's actions, however, differed signifi cantly from the policies of neighbouring Serbia or Bulgaria, where the deosmanisation processes resulted in the partial or complete elimination of Islamic culture from the public space. Therefore, the article aims to outline the cultural policy of Austria-Hungary in Bosnia and Herzegovina, primarily in the context of the culture of remembrance, and to show the Austrian visions of the approach to the local past. The capital city of Sarajevo served as an example of this policy, where the processes mentioned above are best seen in terms of the actions of the authorities themselves, the preserved archival legacy, and professional literature.
Culture of Remembrance, Visuality, and Crisis in the Balkans (17th-20th Century), ed. N. Makuljević, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade, 2021, (123-137), 2021
This paper deals with representations of Bosnia and Herzegovina in the publication Kriegs-Bilder-Skizzen aus dem Bosnisch-Herzegowinischen Occupations-Feldzugе 1878, analyzing illustrations based on photographs captured during the occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina by the Austro Hungarian Empire in 1878. The paper analyzes the arrangement of the illustrations in the publication and their depictions of the Bosnian landscape aimed at a contemporary Austro-Hungarian audience. By extension, the paper explores representational issues surrounding the Bosnian crisis, namely the Austro-Hungarian gaze on the Bosnian territory, culture, and population, and its influence on the political and social reality of Bosnia and Herzegovina.