Masculinity and mobilised folklore: the image of the hajduk in the creation of the modern Serbian warrior

Based on Hobsbawm’s notion of “invented traditions,” this thesis argues that the Serbian warrior tradition, the hajduk, was formalised from the folk oral epic tradition into official state practices. Using reports from the Balkan Wars of 1912-1913, military histories of Yugoslavia’s Second World War...

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Main Author: Bozanich, Stevan
Other Authors: Yekelchyk, Serhy
Format: Others
Language:English
en
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/8402
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spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-84022017-08-05T17:26:32Z Masculinity and mobilised folklore: the image of the hajduk in the creation of the modern Serbian warrior Bozanich, Stevan Yekelchyk, Serhy Serbian history Yugoslavia Yugoslav history hajduk paramilitary insurgency Chetnik Partisan gusle oral folk epic Serbia mass violence atrocity mobilisation genocide ethnic cleansing nationalism ethnicity masculinity Based on Hobsbawm’s notion of “invented traditions,” this thesis argues that the Serbian warrior tradition, the hajduk, was formalised from the folk oral epic tradition into official state practices. Using reports from the Balkan Wars of 1912-1913, military histories of Yugoslavia’s Second World War, and case files from the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY), this thesis shows how the hajduk epics were used to articulate war programs and formations, to construct perpetrator and victim identities, and to help encourage and justify the levels of violence during the Yugoslav wars of succession, 1991-1995. The thesis shows how the formalising of the invented hajduk tradition made the epics an important part of political and military mobilisation for at least the last two centuries. During Serbia’s modernisation campaign in the nineteenth century, the epic hajduk traditions were codified by Serbian intellectuals and fashioned into national stories of heroism. While cleansing territories of undesirable populations during the Balkan Wars of 1912-1913, the hajduks were portrayed in the tradition of nation builders by the Kingdom of Serbia. The hajduk tradition was also mobilised as Nazi Germany invaded Yugoslavia in 1941, with both Draža Mihailović’s Četniks and Tito’s Partisans appropriating the historic guerrilla tradition. During the “re-traditionalisation” period under Slobodan Milošević in the 1980s, the invented hajduk tradition was again mobilised in the service of war. As Bosnian Muslim bodies were flung from the Mehmed Sokolović Bridge in Višegrad in 1992, the Serbian perpetrators dreamed of themselves as avenging hajduks thus justifying a modern ethnic cleansing. Graduate 2017-08-04T18:25:37Z 2017-08-04T18:25:37Z 2017 2017-08-04 Thesis https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/8402 English en Available to the World Wide Web application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language English
en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Serbian history
Yugoslavia
Yugoslav history
hajduk
paramilitary
insurgency
Chetnik
Partisan
gusle
oral folk epic
Serbia
mass violence
atrocity
mobilisation
genocide
ethnic cleansing
nationalism
ethnicity
masculinity
spellingShingle Serbian history
Yugoslavia
Yugoslav history
hajduk
paramilitary
insurgency
Chetnik
Partisan
gusle
oral folk epic
Serbia
mass violence
atrocity
mobilisation
genocide
ethnic cleansing
nationalism
ethnicity
masculinity
Bozanich, Stevan
Masculinity and mobilised folklore: the image of the hajduk in the creation of the modern Serbian warrior
description Based on Hobsbawm’s notion of “invented traditions,” this thesis argues that the Serbian warrior tradition, the hajduk, was formalised from the folk oral epic tradition into official state practices. Using reports from the Balkan Wars of 1912-1913, military histories of Yugoslavia’s Second World War, and case files from the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY), this thesis shows how the hajduk epics were used to articulate war programs and formations, to construct perpetrator and victim identities, and to help encourage and justify the levels of violence during the Yugoslav wars of succession, 1991-1995. The thesis shows how the formalising of the invented hajduk tradition made the epics an important part of political and military mobilisation for at least the last two centuries. During Serbia’s modernisation campaign in the nineteenth century, the epic hajduk traditions were codified by Serbian intellectuals and fashioned into national stories of heroism. While cleansing territories of undesirable populations during the Balkan Wars of 1912-1913, the hajduks were portrayed in the tradition of nation builders by the Kingdom of Serbia. The hajduk tradition was also mobilised as Nazi Germany invaded Yugoslavia in 1941, with both Draža Mihailović’s Četniks and Tito’s Partisans appropriating the historic guerrilla tradition. During the “re-traditionalisation” period under Slobodan Milošević in the 1980s, the invented hajduk tradition was again mobilised in the service of war. As Bosnian Muslim bodies were flung from the Mehmed Sokolović Bridge in Višegrad in 1992, the Serbian perpetrators dreamed of themselves as avenging hajduks thus justifying a modern ethnic cleansing. === Graduate
author2 Yekelchyk, Serhy
author_facet Yekelchyk, Serhy
Bozanich, Stevan
author Bozanich, Stevan
author_sort Bozanich, Stevan
title Masculinity and mobilised folklore: the image of the hajduk in the creation of the modern Serbian warrior
title_short Masculinity and mobilised folklore: the image of the hajduk in the creation of the modern Serbian warrior
title_full Masculinity and mobilised folklore: the image of the hajduk in the creation of the modern Serbian warrior
title_fullStr Masculinity and mobilised folklore: the image of the hajduk in the creation of the modern Serbian warrior
title_full_unstemmed Masculinity and mobilised folklore: the image of the hajduk in the creation of the modern Serbian warrior
title_sort masculinity and mobilised folklore: the image of the hajduk in the creation of the modern serbian warrior
publishDate 2017
url https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/8402
work_keys_str_mv AT bozanichstevan masculinityandmobilisedfolkloretheimageofthehajdukinthecreationofthemodernserbianwarrior
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