Books by Dario Brentin
The history of sport in socialist Yugoslavia is a peculiar lens through which to examine the coun... more The history of sport in socialist Yugoslavia is a peculiar lens through which to examine the country’s social, cultural and political transformations. Sport is represented as one of the most popular and engaging cultural phenomena of social life. Sport both embodied the social dynamics of the socialist period as well as revealing questions of the everyday lives of the Yugoslav people. Ultimately, sport was closely intertwined with the country’s overall destiny. This volume offers an introduction into the myriad social functions that sport served in the Yugoslav socialist project. It illustrates how sport was central to the establishment of Yugoslavia’s physical and leisure culture in the early post-Second World War period, an international promotional tool for Yugoslav communists championing the ideological superiority of the ‘Brotherhood and Unity’ and the Non-Aligned Movement, as well as a social field in which the ideological contradictions of Yugoslav socialism became increasingly apparent. The chapters expand the existing knowledge of the processes that defined Yugoslav sport and contribute to a more nuanced understanding of socialist Yugoslavia in the years between 1945 and 1991.
This book was originally published as a special issue of The International Journal of the History of Sport.
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From Slovenia to Turkey, social movements and protests have shaken the political systems of South... more From Slovenia to Turkey, social movements and protests have shaken the political systems of Southeast Europe. Confronting issues such as austerity, the provision and privatisation of welfare, public utilities and public space, corruption, bureaucratic inefficiency, environmental concerns and authoritarian tendencies, these revolts have also served as conduits for broader social and political discontent. While they have contributed to the defeat of unpopular policies and practices and the fall of governments, perhaps their most significant impact has been in creating dynamic political and social actors and contributing to the realignment of the political space.
This volume sheds new light on the wave of protests and emerging social movements. Placing individual protests in a wider context, it highlights connections between different social movements and discusses parallels with similar movements from recent history. The contributors include both well-established scholars and up-and-coming researchers who engage with both activist and academic perspectives to identify the similar and varying dynamics of both the protests and the governments’ responses to them.
Building upon studies of social movements, the book will be of interest to scholars examining political dissent, protests and mechanisms of mobilisation in the region.
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Special Issues by Dario Brentin
Full Special Issue: https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fhsp20/34/9
From the Concept of the Communi... more Full Special Issue: https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fhsp20/34/9
From the Concept of the Communist ‘New Man’ to Nationalist Hooliganism: Research Perspectives on Sport in Socialist Yugoslavia
Dario Brentin & Dejan Zec
Pages: 713-728
Laying the Foundations of Physical Culture: The Stadium Revolution in Socialist Yugoslavia
Richard Mills
Pages: 729-752
How Doing Sport Became a Culture: Producing the Concept of Physical Cultivation of the Yugoslavs
Ana Petrov
Pages: 753-766
Article
The 1984 Sarajevo Winter Olympics and Identity-Formation in Late Socialist Sarajevo
Zlatko Jovanovic
Pages: 767-782
FC Red Star Belgrade and the Multiplicity of Social Identifications in Socialist Yugoslavia: Representative Dimensions of the ‘Big Four’ Football Clubs
Martin Blasius
Pages: 783-799
Like a Bridge Over Troubled Adriatic Water: The Complex Relationship between Italian and Yugoslavian Sporting Diplomacy (1945–1954)
Nicola Sbetti
Pages: 800-814
Blind-Alleys on the Road to Communism: ‘Isms’ of the Automobile Sport in Socialist Yugoslavia, 1945–1992
Marko Miljković
Pages: 815-831
How Falcons Became Partizans
Hrvoje Klasić
Pages: 832-847
Published online: 27 Nov 2017
Gender Policies and Amateur Sports in Early Yugoslav Socialism
Ivan Simić
Pages: 848-861
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"Populism from Below in the Balkans", 1-16
by Dario Brentin, Tamara Pavasović Trošt
"Populism an... more "Populism from Below in the Balkans", 1-16
by Dario Brentin, Tamara Pavasović Trošt
"Populism and Anti-Establishment Politics in Kosovo: A Case Study of Lëvizja Vetëvendosje", 17-43
by Bilge Yabanci
"Authoritarian Populism and Hegemony: Constructing ‘the People’ in Macedonia’s illiberal discourse", 44-66
by Ljupcho Petkovski
"When is Populism Acceptable? The Involvement of Intellectuals in the Bulgarian Summer Protests in 2013", 67-86
by Georgi Medarov
"On Populist Pop Culture: Ethno as the Contemporary Political Ideology in Serbia", 87-106
by Irena Šentevska
"The Potential of Popular Culture for the Creation of Left Populism in Serbia: The Case of the Hip-Hop Collective “The Bombs of the Nineties”", 107-126
by Jovana Papović, Astrea Pejović
All papers: http://www.suedosteuropa.uni-graz.at/cse/en/current_issue
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Peer-Reviewed Articles by Dario Brentin
This article provides an overview on some of the key issues related to the Bleiburg commemoration... more This article provides an overview on some of the key issues related to the Bleiburg commemoration and more broadly the cultural memory of Partisan crimes at the end of the Second World War. Drawing upon four years of fieldwork, media analysis, and recent historiographical debates, the authors take a transnational approach in examining why Bleiburg remains one of the most controversial commemorations not just in Croatia but in the region. The article focuses on historical narratives in the commemorative speeches, the role of space in shaping memory politics, symbols and monuments present at Bleiburg Field, and the broader context of how Austrian politics affects the commemoration and its public perception.
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This article provides an overview on some of the key issues related to the Bleiburg commemoration... more This article provides an overview on some of the key issues related to the Bleiburg commemoration and more broadly the cultural memory of Partisan crimes at the end of the Second World War. Drawing upon four years of fieldwork, media analysis, and recent historiographical debates, the authors take a transnational approach in examining why Bleiburg remains one of the most controversial commemorations not just in Croatia but in the region. The article focuses on historical narratives in the commemorative speeches, the role of space in shaping memory politics, symbols and monuments present at Bleiburg Field, and the broader context of how Austrian politics affects the commemoration and its public perception.
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The article offers an introduction into the myriad of social functions sport and physical culture... more The article offers an introduction into the myriad of social functions sport and physical culture had during the Yugoslav socialist project. It illustrates how sport was central to the establishment of the federation’s physical and leisure culture in the early post-Second World War period, an international promotional tool for Yugoslav communists championing the ideological superiority of ‘Brotherhood and Unity’ and the Non-Aligned Movement, as well as a social field in which the ideological contradictions of Yugoslav socialism became increasingly apparent. It argues that throughout the country’s existence, sport was one of the most popular and engaging cultural phenomena of social life emblematising the social dynamics of the socialist period, as well as questions of the everyday lives of the Yugoslav people. The article furthermore addresses some of the central issues that are chronic for sport-related research in socialist Yugoslavia. These include fundamental questions of the very nature of sport and its role in different political systems, but also more practical issues researchers face, such as the questions of relevant historical sources and the available scholarly and non-scholarly literature. It thus aims to expand the existing knowledge of the processes which defined Yugoslav sport during socialism and thereby contribute to a more nuanced understanding of socialist Yugoslavia’s society.
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This conceptual introduction seeks to frame and provide a context for the following special issue... more This conceptual introduction seeks to frame and provide a context for the following special issue on “Football from below in South-Eastern Europe”. The special issue focus on fan activism and protest aims to understand, theorize and interpret the efforts of football fans both visible as (sub-)political actors in public space and/or as collectives engaged in experiments with new forms of club ownership and direct/participatory democracy. This introduction first details various features of the South-Eastern European context, before exploring how the texts relate to each other in terms of fan, activist and academic positionalities. Following this, one dimension to the concept of protest ‘from below’ - namely that of a strict ‘people/politics' (narod/politika) opposition - is explained and critiqued. Finally, thematic gaps within the special issue are identified and possible areas for future research are discussed.
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The last several years have witnessed a so-called “political earthquake” of populist successes in... more The last several years have witnessed a so-called “political earthquake” of populist successes in consolidated democracies throughout Europe. Populist movements and parties have manifested themselves most markedly through right-wing agendas including opposition to modernization, globalization, regional integration, immigration, appeals to working class fears of social decline, and resentment of elites. Consequently an entire body of literature has examined the basic tenets of populism, populist strategies and rhetoric, determinants of its success, and its effects on people, parties, and polities. Much of the social research on the issue however, both historical and contemporary, has been excessively focused on populism among elites and institutions. By applying a relatively narrow methodological approach, most of the existing literature is leaving the agency of individuals and social groups and their representation largely unproblematized. In this special edition, we thus attempt to draw attention to an issue generally overlooked by researchers: populism from below.
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In the case of Croatia, sport has proved to be a highly politicized form of national expression, ... more In the case of Croatia, sport has proved to be a highly politicized form of national expression, functioning as a salient social field in which its “national habitus codes” are most intensively articulated, debated, and contested. An incident emblematizing this argument occurred on 19 November 2013, when the Croatian national football team secured their qualification for the 2014 Football World Cup in Brazil. In front of the 25,000 people at Zagreb's Maksimir stadium, the national team player, Josip Šimunić, grabbed the microphone and “greeted” all four stands with a loud chanting of Za dom (For the home(land)), to which the stands thunderously responded spremni (ready), the official salute of the Independent State of Croatia, a fascist WWII quisling-state. This paper argues that the issue extends beyond politically radicalized football hooligans and has to be understood from the standpoint of “social memory.” By focusing on football, the article scrutinizes debates in the Croatian public sphere dealing with the salute Za dom – spremni. Providing an insight into its complex and multi-layered nature, this paper illustrates that Croatian football has to be understood as a field in which social memory is prominently constructed, heatedly articulated, and powerfully disseminated.
Full article: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00905992.2015.1136996
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In December 2014, the International Olympic Committee [IOC] granted full membership to Kosovo. Fo... more In December 2014, the International Olympic Committee [IOC] granted full membership to Kosovo. For the young state, which had declared its independence only in 2008, this decision meant that it could take part in the upcoming 2016 Summer Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. This analysis illustrates the significance of Kosovo’s full IOC membership. Arguing that IOC membership can be identified as both the “end” and “beginning” of Kosovo’s diplomatic endeavour towards international recognition, the role of sport within this process is illuminated. It mirrors the strategic value of representative sport for a nation-building process as well as its particular significance for public diplomacy in Kosovo. Kosovar political elites shifted their focus towards sport because “traditional” diplomatic efforts, despite being successful to a certain extent, could not break the seemingly cemented status quo considering its United Nations [UN] status. Inclusion in the “Olympic family” represents more than just a symbolic victory for Kosovar diplomacy. The Kosovar nation-building and -branding process, emblematised through the “soft power” of representative sport, could be increasingly used to create symbolic pressure on states that have not yet recognised Kosovo; its ultimate diplomatic goal remains to enter the UN, even if it has to be through “sport’s door.”
You can download the full paper at:
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/09592296.2016.1169799?journalCode=fdps20
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The disintegration of socialist Yugoslavia and the subsequent Homeland War signified the beginnin... more The disintegration of socialist Yugoslavia and the subsequent Homeland War signified the beginning of essential transformations of Croatia’s political, economic, and ideological cornerstones. In this formative period of crisis and beyond, sport proved to be a highly politicized realm of national expression in which narratives of nation, identity, and culture were intensely articulated. Moreover, sport can be described as a unique source of social knowledge contributing greatly to the formation, establishment, and conservation of the newly emerging Croatian national identity. Sport, as a Croatian “national motor”, was constructed as a field where ethnic homogeneity dominated and functioned as a field of boundary construction and symbolic inclusion/exclusion. Affirming Franjo Tuđman’s presidential narrative of Croatia as the “Homeland of all Croats”, members of national minorities or athletes claiming transethnic identities were thus subsequently marginalized, silenced, and implicitly denied. In such a political culture, the field of sport continuously epitomized central ideological narratives functioning as influential transmitters of political and symbolic messages for breaking down social reality and reconstituting it in ethnic terms. The paper offers an insight into how post-Yugoslav societies were homogenized not only through ethnic warfare and post-conflict ethnic engineering, but also through practices of symbolic exclusion and inclusion, as shown through the case of postsocialist Croatian sport.
https://www.ceeol.com/search/article-detail?id=268728
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In post-socialist Croatia, sport can be described as a unique source of social knowledge contribu... more In post-socialist Croatia, sport can be described as a unique source of social knowledge contributing greatly to the formation, establishment and conservation of the emerging national identity after the country's secession from socialist Yugoslavia in 1990–1991. Throughout the 1990s, sport, including interpretation, images, metaphors and actual events, proved to be a highly politicized form of national expression in which narratives of nation, identity and culture were intensely articulated. After all, the country's first president, Franjo Tudjman, proclaimed that ‘football victories shape a nation's identity as much as wars do’, showing a remarkable awareness of the galvanizing effect sport can have in times of crisis. This paper examines narratives expressed within the field, pointing out how ideological contents were transmitted through sport events, media reports and fan culture in order to show what functions and social roles sport had taken during the first 10 years of Croatian independence.
You can access the full article for free at: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/17430437.2013.801217?src=recsys
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Book chapters by Dario Brentin
Sporting Realities. Critical Reading of the Sport Documentary, 2020
.
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"Framing the Nation and Collective Identities: Political Rituals and Cultural Memory of the Twentieth-Century Traumas in Croatia", edited by Vjeran Pavlaković, Davor Pauković, 2019
In the case of post-Yugoslav Croatia, sport has proved to be a highly politicised form of nationa... more In the case of post-Yugoslav Croatia, sport has proved to be a highly politicised form of national expression functioning as a salient social field in which Croatia’s national habitus codes are most intensively articulated, debated and contested. This chapter expends these arguments by exploring the role of sport in the (re-)production of memory narratives. It thereby illuminates how the social field of sport produces and reproduces narratives of Croatian national identity, particularly in reference to the Homeland War. It identifies Croatian athletes, sport officials and fans as agents of remembrance and ascribes them a significant role in the process of shaping and constructing social memory. By focusing on the social field of sport, the chapter aims to scrutinize debates in the Croatian public sphere dealing with questions of history and national identity and provide an insight into its complex and multi-layered nature. The chapter uses both ethnographic and newspaper material. The contribution ultimately aims to illustrate that Croatian sport has to be understood as a social field in which social memory is prominently constructed, heatedly articulated and powerfully disseminated, thereby offering an additional layer to existing studies of social memory and remembrance in post-Yugoslav societies.
More info: https://www.routledge.com/Framing-the-Nation-and-Collective-Identities-Political-Rituals-and-Cultural/Pavlakovic-Paukovic/p/book/9781138504011
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Book Reviews by Dario Brentin
Southeast European and Black Sea Studies , 2019
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Books by Dario Brentin
This book was originally published as a special issue of The International Journal of the History of Sport.
This volume sheds new light on the wave of protests and emerging social movements. Placing individual protests in a wider context, it highlights connections between different social movements and discusses parallels with similar movements from recent history. The contributors include both well-established scholars and up-and-coming researchers who engage with both activist and academic perspectives to identify the similar and varying dynamics of both the protests and the governments’ responses to them.
Building upon studies of social movements, the book will be of interest to scholars examining political dissent, protests and mechanisms of mobilisation in the region.
Special Issues by Dario Brentin
From the Concept of the Communist ‘New Man’ to Nationalist Hooliganism: Research Perspectives on Sport in Socialist Yugoslavia
Dario Brentin & Dejan Zec
Pages: 713-728
Laying the Foundations of Physical Culture: The Stadium Revolution in Socialist Yugoslavia
Richard Mills
Pages: 729-752
How Doing Sport Became a Culture: Producing the Concept of Physical Cultivation of the Yugoslavs
Ana Petrov
Pages: 753-766
Article
The 1984 Sarajevo Winter Olympics and Identity-Formation in Late Socialist Sarajevo
Zlatko Jovanovic
Pages: 767-782
FC Red Star Belgrade and the Multiplicity of Social Identifications in Socialist Yugoslavia: Representative Dimensions of the ‘Big Four’ Football Clubs
Martin Blasius
Pages: 783-799
Like a Bridge Over Troubled Adriatic Water: The Complex Relationship between Italian and Yugoslavian Sporting Diplomacy (1945–1954)
Nicola Sbetti
Pages: 800-814
Blind-Alleys on the Road to Communism: ‘Isms’ of the Automobile Sport in Socialist Yugoslavia, 1945–1992
Marko Miljković
Pages: 815-831
How Falcons Became Partizans
Hrvoje Klasić
Pages: 832-847
Published online: 27 Nov 2017
Gender Policies and Amateur Sports in Early Yugoslav Socialism
Ivan Simić
Pages: 848-861
Contributions
Dario Brentin & Andrew Hodges: Fan protest and activism: football from below in South-Eastern Europe (http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14660970.2017.1333674)
Daǧhan Irak: ‘Shoot some pepper gas at me!’ football fans vs. Erdoğan: organized politicization or reactive politics? (http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14660970.2017.1333675)
Dino Vukušić & Lukas Miošić: Reinventing and reclaiming football through radical fan practices? NK Zagreb 041 and Futsal Dinamo (http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14660970.2017.1333676)
Ivan Djordjević & Relja Pekić: Is there space for the left? Football fans and political positioning in Serbia (http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14660970.2017.1333678)
Adrien Battini & Deniz Koşulu: When ultras defend trees: framing politics through subcultural fandom-comparing UltrAslan and Çarşı before and during Occupy Gezi (http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14660970.2017.1333673)
Andrew Gilbert: Tri vjere, jedna nacija, država Tuzla! Football fans, political protest and the right to the city in postsocialist Bosnia–Herzegovina (http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14660970.2017.1335487)
Dinu Guțu: World going one way, people another: ultras football gangs’ survival networks and clientelism in post-socialist Romania (http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14660970.2017.1333677)
by Dario Brentin, Tamara Pavasović Trošt
"Populism and Anti-Establishment Politics in Kosovo: A Case Study of Lëvizja Vetëvendosje", 17-43
by Bilge Yabanci
"Authoritarian Populism and Hegemony: Constructing ‘the People’ in Macedonia’s illiberal discourse", 44-66
by Ljupcho Petkovski
"When is Populism Acceptable? The Involvement of Intellectuals in the Bulgarian Summer Protests in 2013", 67-86
by Georgi Medarov
"On Populist Pop Culture: Ethno as the Contemporary Political Ideology in Serbia", 87-106
by Irena Šentevska
"The Potential of Popular Culture for the Creation of Left Populism in Serbia: The Case of the Hip-Hop Collective “The Bombs of the Nineties”", 107-126
by Jovana Papović, Astrea Pejović
All papers: http://www.suedosteuropa.uni-graz.at/cse/en/current_issue
Peer-Reviewed Articles by Dario Brentin
Full article: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00905992.2015.1136996
You can download the full paper at:
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/09592296.2016.1169799?journalCode=fdps20
https://www.ceeol.com/search/article-detail?id=268728
You can access the full article for free at: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/17430437.2013.801217?src=recsys
Book chapters by Dario Brentin
More info: https://www.routledge.com/Framing-the-Nation-and-Collective-Identities-Political-Rituals-and-Cultural/Pavlakovic-Paukovic/p/book/9781138504011
Book Reviews by Dario Brentin
This book was originally published as a special issue of The International Journal of the History of Sport.
This volume sheds new light on the wave of protests and emerging social movements. Placing individual protests in a wider context, it highlights connections between different social movements and discusses parallels with similar movements from recent history. The contributors include both well-established scholars and up-and-coming researchers who engage with both activist and academic perspectives to identify the similar and varying dynamics of both the protests and the governments’ responses to them.
Building upon studies of social movements, the book will be of interest to scholars examining political dissent, protests and mechanisms of mobilisation in the region.
From the Concept of the Communist ‘New Man’ to Nationalist Hooliganism: Research Perspectives on Sport in Socialist Yugoslavia
Dario Brentin & Dejan Zec
Pages: 713-728
Laying the Foundations of Physical Culture: The Stadium Revolution in Socialist Yugoslavia
Richard Mills
Pages: 729-752
How Doing Sport Became a Culture: Producing the Concept of Physical Cultivation of the Yugoslavs
Ana Petrov
Pages: 753-766
Article
The 1984 Sarajevo Winter Olympics and Identity-Formation in Late Socialist Sarajevo
Zlatko Jovanovic
Pages: 767-782
FC Red Star Belgrade and the Multiplicity of Social Identifications in Socialist Yugoslavia: Representative Dimensions of the ‘Big Four’ Football Clubs
Martin Blasius
Pages: 783-799
Like a Bridge Over Troubled Adriatic Water: The Complex Relationship between Italian and Yugoslavian Sporting Diplomacy (1945–1954)
Nicola Sbetti
Pages: 800-814
Blind-Alleys on the Road to Communism: ‘Isms’ of the Automobile Sport in Socialist Yugoslavia, 1945–1992
Marko Miljković
Pages: 815-831
How Falcons Became Partizans
Hrvoje Klasić
Pages: 832-847
Published online: 27 Nov 2017
Gender Policies and Amateur Sports in Early Yugoslav Socialism
Ivan Simić
Pages: 848-861
Contributions
Dario Brentin & Andrew Hodges: Fan protest and activism: football from below in South-Eastern Europe (http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14660970.2017.1333674)
Daǧhan Irak: ‘Shoot some pepper gas at me!’ football fans vs. Erdoğan: organized politicization or reactive politics? (http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14660970.2017.1333675)
Dino Vukušić & Lukas Miošić: Reinventing and reclaiming football through radical fan practices? NK Zagreb 041 and Futsal Dinamo (http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14660970.2017.1333676)
Ivan Djordjević & Relja Pekić: Is there space for the left? Football fans and political positioning in Serbia (http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14660970.2017.1333678)
Adrien Battini & Deniz Koşulu: When ultras defend trees: framing politics through subcultural fandom-comparing UltrAslan and Çarşı before and during Occupy Gezi (http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14660970.2017.1333673)
Andrew Gilbert: Tri vjere, jedna nacija, država Tuzla! Football fans, political protest and the right to the city in postsocialist Bosnia–Herzegovina (http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14660970.2017.1335487)
Dinu Guțu: World going one way, people another: ultras football gangs’ survival networks and clientelism in post-socialist Romania (http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14660970.2017.1333677)
by Dario Brentin, Tamara Pavasović Trošt
"Populism and Anti-Establishment Politics in Kosovo: A Case Study of Lëvizja Vetëvendosje", 17-43
by Bilge Yabanci
"Authoritarian Populism and Hegemony: Constructing ‘the People’ in Macedonia’s illiberal discourse", 44-66
by Ljupcho Petkovski
"When is Populism Acceptable? The Involvement of Intellectuals in the Bulgarian Summer Protests in 2013", 67-86
by Georgi Medarov
"On Populist Pop Culture: Ethno as the Contemporary Political Ideology in Serbia", 87-106
by Irena Šentevska
"The Potential of Popular Culture for the Creation of Left Populism in Serbia: The Case of the Hip-Hop Collective “The Bombs of the Nineties”", 107-126
by Jovana Papović, Astrea Pejović
All papers: http://www.suedosteuropa.uni-graz.at/cse/en/current_issue
Full article: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00905992.2015.1136996
You can download the full paper at:
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/09592296.2016.1169799?journalCode=fdps20
https://www.ceeol.com/search/article-detail?id=268728
You can access the full article for free at: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/17430437.2013.801217?src=recsys
More info: https://www.routledge.com/Framing-the-Nation-and-Collective-Identities-Political-Rituals-and-Cultural/Pavlakovic-Paukovic/p/book/9781138504011