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Constructing Yugoslavia: A Transnational History [Hardback]

Vesna Drapac provides an insightful survey of the changing nature of the Yugoslav ideal, demonstrating why Yugoslavism was championed at different times and by whom, and how it was constructed in the minds of outside observers. Covering the period from the 1850s to the death of Tito in 1980, Drapac situates Yugoslavia in the broader international context and examines its history within the more familiar story of Europe in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

This approachable study also explores key themes and debates, including:

the place of the nation-state within the worldview of nineteenth-century intellectuals the memory of war and commemorative practices in the interwar years resistance and collaboration the nature of dictatorships gender and citizenship Yugoslavia's role from the perspective of the 'Superpowers'.

Drawing on a wide range of sources in order to recreate the atmosphere of the period, Constructing Yugoslavia traces the formation of popular perceptions of Yugoslavia and their impact on policy toward Yugoslavs. It is essential reading for anyone with an interest in the history of this fascinating nation, and its ultimate demise.
Acknowledgements viii
Maps xi
Introduction 1
1 Imagining Savage Europe and Inventing Yugoslavia: 1850-1914 22
2 The Expansion of Gallant Serbia into Yugoslavia: 1914-1920 63
3 A State in Search of a Nation: the Kingdom, 1920-1940 96
4 'The future lies with the federative idea': War and Dissolution, 1941-1945 149
5 'A society almost free': Tito's Yugoslavia 195
Conclusion 237
Chronology 259
Prime Ministers and Presidents 270
Notes 274
Bibliography 316
Index 325
VESNA DRAPAC is Associate Professor of History at the University of Adelaide, Australia.