The survival paradox: Can a culture survive the political transgressions of post-war democratisation?
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USyd Access
Type
ThesisThesis type
Doctor of PhilosophyAuthor/s
Plakalo, TamaraAbstract
This study examines Bosnia and Herzegovina as a culture of survival. It posits that the three dominant ethno-national groups in Bosnia (Bosniaks, Serbs and Croats) share a common syncretic culture as evidenced by common aspects of social organisation, models of cultural adaptation ...
See moreThis study examines Bosnia and Herzegovina as a culture of survival. It posits that the three dominant ethno-national groups in Bosnia (Bosniaks, Serbs and Croats) share a common syncretic culture as evidenced by common aspects of social organisation, models of cultural adaptation and production, and ideological dynamics among the three groups. The study identifies three distinct cross-ethnic patterns that have dominated Bosnia’s post-war development: 1) socially narcissistic and self-victimising cultural behaviours, which favour constant reinterpretation of historical events to inform and promote antagonistic political and identity narratives; 2) the religious revival and the return of social conservatism to fill the vacuum left by the abrupt departure of socialism as the last culturally compatible system of ideological cohesion, collectivist morality and communal care; and 3) the failure of ideas in facilitating the emergence of an inclusive and culturally compatible narrative of belonging for all three ethno-national groups. Questioning the global narrative of transition to democracy, the absence of women in ethnonational programs and Western normative universalism, the study argues that Bosnia and Herzegovina requires more effective theoretical and political approaches to post-war transition and democratisation than those applied by the international community in Bosnia and Herzegovina over the past twenty-five years.
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See moreThis study examines Bosnia and Herzegovina as a culture of survival. It posits that the three dominant ethno-national groups in Bosnia (Bosniaks, Serbs and Croats) share a common syncretic culture as evidenced by common aspects of social organisation, models of cultural adaptation and production, and ideological dynamics among the three groups. The study identifies three distinct cross-ethnic patterns that have dominated Bosnia’s post-war development: 1) socially narcissistic and self-victimising cultural behaviours, which favour constant reinterpretation of historical events to inform and promote antagonistic political and identity narratives; 2) the religious revival and the return of social conservatism to fill the vacuum left by the abrupt departure of socialism as the last culturally compatible system of ideological cohesion, collectivist morality and communal care; and 3) the failure of ideas in facilitating the emergence of an inclusive and culturally compatible narrative of belonging for all three ethno-national groups. Questioning the global narrative of transition to democracy, the absence of women in ethnonational programs and Western normative universalism, the study argues that Bosnia and Herzegovina requires more effective theoretical and political approaches to post-war transition and democratisation than those applied by the international community in Bosnia and Herzegovina over the past twenty-five years.
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Date
2024Rights statement
The author retains copyright of this thesis. It may only be used for the purposes of research and study. It must not be used for any other purposes and may not be transmitted or shared with others without prior permission.Faculty/School
Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, School of Social and Political SciencesDepartment, Discipline or Centre
Discipline of Sociology and CriminologyAwarding institution
The University of SydneySubjects
Bosnia and Herzegovinaculture
syncretism
Bosnianness
postcolonialism
post-socialist
Yugoslavia
Balkans
Dayton Peace Agreement
Bosnia
ethnocentrism
ethnopolitics
identity
cultural identity
feminism
Bosnian women
art as agency
Bosnian artists
Bosnian literature
Bosnian theatre
nationalism
nation state
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