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Comparative Southeast European Studies

Comparative Southeast European Studies

Volume 64 Issue 4

  • Contents
  • Journal Overview
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Frontmatter

February 1, 2017 Page range: i-i
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Memories and Narratives of the 1999 NATO Bombing in Serbia

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Memories and Narratives of the 1999 NATO Bombing in Serbia

Orli Fridman, Krisztina Rácz January 30, 2017 Page range: 433-437
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Memories and Narratives of the 1999 NATO Bombing in Serbia

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Memories of the 1999 NATO Bombing in Belgrade, Serbia

Orli Fridman January 30, 2017 Page range: 438-459
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Abstract

This paper analyses the memories of Belgrade residents of the 1999 NATO bombing of Serbia (then part of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia). By focusing on the memories of this event, yet placing them in a broader context of the conflicts of the 1990s—the breakup of Yugoslavia and the post-Yugoslav wars—this essay explores what international intervention has meant to respondents in Belgrade by documenting memories of international intervention among older and younger generations, as well as among active members of antiwar NGOs in Serbia and citizens who were not engaged in activism during the 1990s. The paper aims to expand the scope of the discussions on dealing with the past and on transitional justice in the Western Balkans and to place them in the context of social memory studies and the study of post-conflict transformation processes. Furthermore, by presenting the case study of Serbia, this text contributes to the analysis of local mnemonic batt les as part of the creation of collective memories of the 1990s in post-Milošević Serbia, and it sheds light on the memories of the bombing as related to the war in Kosovo and the subsequent effects on shaping postwar Serbia–Kosovo relations.

Memories and Narratives of the 1999 NATO Bombing in Serbia

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Official Commemoration of the NATO Bombing of Serbia. A Case Study of the Fifteenth Anniversary

Marija Mandić January 30, 2017 Page range: 460-481
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Abstract

This article analyses how NATO’s bombing of Serbia has been officially commemorated in that country. Initially, it provides an overview of the commemorations performed between 2000 and 2013, covering both the commemorative practices and policies of leading Serbian politicians and alternative voices. The focus then turns to the fifteenth anniversary of the bombing in 2014. Just as in previous commemorations, there was no central ceremony, but, rather, a series of commemorative events held all over the country. The controversies that these aroused are then discussed, in particular those surrounding the commemoration of Radio Television Serbia’s employees and the spontaneous commemorative acts that took place in Serbian schools.

Memories and Narratives of the 1999 NATO Bombing in Serbia

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‘The Song Has Kept Us’: Soundscape of Belgrade during the NATO Bombing

Srđan Atanasovski December 30, 2016 Page range: 482-499
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Abstract

In this article I explore the sonic and music practices in the experience of the NATO bombing of Belgrade, focusing particularly on their role in the governmental apparatuses both of the NATO forces and of Miloševic’s regime. Drawing on affect studies, I discuss sound and music not only as text, but as sheer intensity, as a vibrational body and force. I argue that the sonic element of the experience of NATO bombing proved important as it provided the surface area, the somatic layer of the war machine, on which the apparatuses of governance could operate and effectuate the production of meaning.

Memories and Narratives of the 1999 NATO Bombing in Serbia

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‘Achieved without Ambiguity?’ Memorializing Victimhood in Belgrade after the 1999 NATO Bombing

Gruia Bădescu January 30, 2017 Page range: 500-519
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This paper examines the memory and narratives of the 1999 NATO bombings through a spatial lens, discussing how the debates surrounding memorial architecture reflect the multiple, and at times conflicting, understandings of the NATO bombing. By analysing the competition to reconstruct Radio Television of Serbia (RTS) from its ruins, this article discusses the tensions and challenges brought by narratives representing victimhood in Belgrade after 1999. It examines how understandings of victimhood have been spatialized through urban memorials, situating the RTS competition in the wider landscape of memorial representations of the NATO bombing in Serbia. Developed using a bottom-up process, the competition for the RTS memorial reflects both the opportunities and the limits of memorial architecture. While the competition and overall debates mirror general trends of memorial architecture in the context of European politics of regret and trauma, the limited scope of the memorial and its marginality in the cityscape both reflect and enhance the continuing obfuscation of the past in Serbia.

Memories and Narratives of the 1999 NATO Bombing in Serbia

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Trauma or Entertainment? Collective Memories of the NATO Bombing of Serbia

Krisztina Rácz December 30, 2016 Page range: 520-543
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Abstract

This article addresses trauma, its absence, and the creation of a collective memory among the contributors to the journal Symposion following the 1999 bombing of Serbia. By examining the group’s e-mails and conducting interviews with some of its members, it explores how their shared narrative patt erns constitute a mnemonic community, and asks what are the shared cultural frameworks that create a space for collective remembering within that community. The article argues that past and current politics of memory in Serbia have been built on discourses of a victimized nation and therefore do not recognize the specific ethnic, class or gender positions of individuals as they were during the bombing. Conversely, the national discourse on memorializing the bombing fails to articulate individual experiences and commemorative practices. This article therefore aims to present and analyse some of them.

Memories and Narratives of the 1999 NATO Bombing in Serbia

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Agents of Change. Women’s Advocacy during Democratization in Croatia

Jagoda Rošul-Gajić December 30, 2016 Page range: 544-559
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This article investigates how Croatian women’s NGOs have contributed to gender policy in Croatia and what instruments they have used at the state level in drafting, initiating, and adopting innovative gender policy. It argues that, as norm advocates, Croatian women’s NGOs have adopted a double strategy: first, calling attention to the Croatian government’s non-compliance with international norms on women’s rights and second, enforcing change. Based on the advocacy of Croatian women’s NGOs, the author introduces the double-strategy model of norm implementation. The methodology is descriptive, whereas the analysis is based both on interviews and on published secondary data.

Travelogue

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#Kosovo

Sophie Hermanns, Kevin Rieger, Johannes Stolle, Maren Weeger February 1, 2017 Page range: 560-573
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Book Reviews

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The Killing Compartments. The Mentality of Mass Murder

Ger Duijzings January 30, 2017 Page range: 574-576
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Phantomgrenzen. Räume und Akteure in der Zeit neu denken

Sabine Rutar January 30, 2017 Page range: 576-580
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Book Reviews

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The War in Our Backyard. The Bosnia and Kosovo Wars through the Lens of the German Print Media

Stefan Ihrig January 30, 2017 Page range: 580-582
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Book Reviews

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Strategies of Symbolic Nation-Building in South Eastern Europe

Paul Reef January 30, 2017 Page range: 582-584
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Book Reviews

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Engineering Revolution. The Paradox of Democracy Promotion in Serbia

Johanna K. Bockman February 1, 2017 Page range: 584-586
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Book Reviews

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Prosecuting Slobodan Milošević. The Unfinished Trial

Wim van Meurs February 1, 2017 Page range: 586-588
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About this journal

The quarterly Comparative Southeast European Studies (COMPSEES) evolved into its new format from that of its predecessor Südosteuropa. Journal for Politics and Society. From 2021 onwards, it is published both digitally, in Open Access, and in print, thereby becoming more easily accessible and even more visible internationally, not least in Southeastern Europe itself. Before long, a digital repository of Südosteuropa will be available to everyone.

Comparative Southeast European Studies will continue to be a forum for scholars in Political Science, Sociology, Contemporary History, Anthropology, Economics, International Relations, Law Studies, Gender Studies, Media Studies, Cultural Studies, and related disciplines. Taking a comparative and broad multidisciplinary perspective it will explore critical processes and societal issues related to the area bounded by the eastern Adriatic, the eastern Mediterranean, and the Black Sea. We use two formats to showcase research. There are peer-reviewed research articles and a shorter format open to other text genres, which are presented under headings such as ‘Commentary’, ‘Interview’, ‘Background’, ‘Policy Analysis’, ‘Film in Focus’, ‘Debate’, ‘Spotlight’, ‘Book Symposium’, ‘The Making of...’, for example. This is a flexible section allowing us to address more immediately pertinent political, social, cultural, and academic matters. In addition, the Journal also features a book review section.

The new name Comparative Southeast European Studies is the logical next step in the Journal’s evolution. After it was founded in 1952, for more than half a century its predecessor Südosteuropa served as a well-established policy advice journal monitoring events in the region, before in 2007 taking a turn towards becoming a research-oriented multidisciplinary forum of the social sciences. Since 2014 the Journal has been published exclusively in English. We have continued to work towards improving its quality, including by addressing the citation indices relevant in the field, as they increase the pool of potential authors. A rigorous double-blind peer review regime has guided us while we have become more selective in what we publish. We prioritise work that is empirically and methodologically sound, well-written and jargon-free, thereby fostering interdisciplinary scholarly communication. We remain committed to broadening the range of the research we publish, while welcoming both emerging and established scholars to publish with us. Comparative Southeast European Studies strives to consolidate its reputation as one of the major area studies journals focusing on Southeastern Europe. We encourage transnational and entangled comparative perspectives, acknowledging that any ‘area’, any geographical construct, functions in its transareal, indeed global, relations.

We welcome both single manuscript submissions and proposals for guest-edited thematic sections. We look forward to working with you.


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