Suedosteuropa. Journal of Politics and Society 67 (2019), 4

Titel der Ausgabe 
Suedosteuropa. Journal of Politics and Society 67 (2019), 4
Weiterer Titel 

Erschienen
Berlin u.a. 2019: De Gruyter Oldenbourg
Erscheint 
viermal jährlich
Anzahl Seiten
124 S.
Preis
Abonnement € 66,00

 

Kontakt

Institution
Südosteuropa. Journal of Politics and Society
Land
Deutschland
c/o
Dr. Sabine Rutar Leibniz-Institut für Ost- und Südosteuropaforschung Landshuter Straße 4 93047 Regensburg
Von
Rutar, Sabine

Issue 4, 2019, of "Südosteuropa" gathers contributions dealing with war remembrance practices and/or church-related issues.

Nicolas Moll (Sarajevo) focuses on a special figure in Bosnian-Herzegowinian war remembrance practices: that of the rescuer who helped people of another ethnicity during the war of 1992-1995. He places this remembrance within the global efforts to publicly acknowledge rescuers, in particular the "Righteous Among the Nations".

Andriy Mykhaleyko (Eichstätt) discusses the establishment of the independent Orthodox Church in Ukraine, which caused a deep crisis in the Orthodoxy. He examines the foundations of this formation of a new Orthodox Church, the religious and political factors influencing the process of its establishment, and the reaction of the Russian Orthodox Church leadership and Russian politicians.

Karin Hofmeisterová (Prague) examines the agenda of the Serbian Orthodox Church in relation to the memory of the Holocaust in post- Milošević Serbia. She focuses on the Jasenovac Committee of the SOC and the role of its head, Bishop Jovan (Ćulibrk), in the memorialization of Staro Sajmište, a distinguished place of the Holocaust in occupied Serbia.

In the Open Section, Anne Dippel and Valeska Bopp-Filimonov (both Jena) reflect on the process of creating the exhibition "We Live Word to Word." Banat - Transylvania - Bukovina: Ethnograffiti of Southeastern Europe, which resulted from an interdisciplinary student seminar at Jena University, based on a team ethnographic journey to Romania and Ukraine.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

CONTENT

Nicolas Moll: Promoting ‘Positive Stories’ of Help and Rescue from the 1992-1995 War in Bosnia and Herzegovina. An Alternative to the
Dichotomy of Guilt and Victimhood?
447–475

Andriy Mykhaleyko: The New Independent Orthodox Church in
Ukraine
476–499

Karin Hofmeisterová: The Serbian Orthodox Church‘s Involvement in
Carrying the Memory of the Holocaust
500–533

THE MAKING OF … AN EXHIBITION

Anne Dippel and Valeska Bopp-Filimonov: Into the Grey Zone, Or:
How to Track Fading Multiculturalism in Southeastern Europe.
The Exhibition ‘”We Live Word to Word.” Banat – Transylvania –
Bukovina. Ethnograffiti of Southeastern Europe’ at the
Friedrich Schiller University Jena, 2018-2020
534–554

BOOK REVIEWS

Caroline Hornstein Tomić / Robert Pichler / Sarah Scholl-Schneider, eds,Remigration to Post-Socialist Europe. Hopes and Realities of Return (Daniel Göler)
555–557

Bojan Bilić / Marija Radoman, eds, Lesbian Activism in the (Post-) Yugoslav Space. Sisterhood and Unity (Sandra Antulov)
557–559

Adam Fagan / Indraneel Sircar, eds, Activist Citizenship in Southeast
Europe (Ognjen Kojanić)
559–562

Larisa Jašarević, Health and Wealth on the Bosnian Market. Intimate
Debt (Ljiljana Pantović)
562–563

Éamonn Ó Ciardha / Gabriela Vojvoda, eds, Politics of Identity in Post-Conflict States. The Bosnian and Irish Experience (Sven Milekić)
564–566

Tatjana Thelen / Larissa Vetters / Keebet von Benda-Beckmann, eds,
Stategraphy. Toward a Relational Anthropology of the State
(Astrea Pejović)
566–568

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