ISBN:
9783319474823
Language:
English
Pages:
1 Online-Ressource (364 pages)
Parallel Title:
Print version Jelača, Dijana The Cultural Life of Capitalism in Yugoslavia : (Post)Socialism and Its Other
DDC:
306.34209497
Keywords:
Russia-History
;
Russia-History
;
Electronic books
Abstract:
The Cultural Life of Capitalism in Yugoslavia -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- Chapter 1 Introduction: Cultural Capitalism the (Post)Yugoslav Way -- Capitalism: A Restructured Feeling -- Cultural Hybridity and the Yugoslav State of (Non-)Exception -- Notes Towards Cultural Capitalism -- References -- Part I Capital(ism) and Class Cultures -- Chapter 2 The Strange Absence of Capital(ism) -- References -- Chapter 3 Fictions of Crime in a State of Exception -- Yugoslav Exceptionalism -- Crime Fiction -- A Specimen Story -- A Socialist Masochism -- References -- Chapter 4 Rethinking Class in Socialist Yugoslavia: Labor, Body, and Moral Economy -- On Liminality -- The Bodies -- The Gaze -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 5 The Restoration of Capitalism After Yugoslavia: Cultural Capital, Class and Power -- Class as a Discursive Object: "Nation-Talk" and "Class-Talk" in Post-Yugoslav Capitalism -- Cultural Boundary-making: Culture as Capital -- Egalitarianism, Neoliberalism and the Myth of Middle-classness -- Five Cultural Types and Their Class: Localism vs Cosmopolitanism -- Aesthetic Cultures and Their Class Affiliation -- Social Character and Moral Economy of Cultural Types: Class, Gender and Ethnicity -- Conclusion: Middle Classes in Search of Mythical Fullness -- References -- Chapter 6 Class and Culture in Yugoslav Factory Newspapers -- I -- II -- III -- IV -- V -- References -- Chapter 7 Post-Yugoslav Notes on Marx's Class Theory and Middle-Class Classism -- Introduction -- Two Theories of Class in Marx -- Class and Culture -- Middle Class and Classism -- References -- Part II Trajectories of Capitalism: Culture and Everyday Life -- Chapter 8 On Yugoslav Market Socialism Through Živojin Pavlović's When I Am Dead and Pale (1967) -- Black Wave Films Preceded the Minerva's Owl of 1968
Abstract:
Contextualization: Pavlović Strikes Against Market Reform -- Visualizing the Blind Spot: Pavlović on Unemployment in the Workers' State -- Anti-Hero Jimmy the Boat: From a Self-Managed Idol to Self-Managed Excrement -- To Abandon the Hope at the End of the Tunnel: From Symbolic Death to a Lanternlight-Dream? -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 9 Against Capitalism from the Stalinist Cellar: The Balkan Spy in the Post-Yugoslav Context -- References -- Chapter 10 The Contested Place of the Detached Home in Yugoslavia's Socialist Cities -- The Shift Toward Single-Family Housing in Yugoslavia -- What Was Wrong with Single-Family Housing, and How to Fix It: Perspectives from Across Yugoslavia -- Strategies for Incorporating Single-Family Housing: An Attempt at a Middle Road -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 11 Yugoslavia Looking Westward: Transnational Consumer Contact with Italy During the 1960s -- Abbreviations -- Positioning Yugoslavia as a Consumer Society -- Doing Business the Italian Way -- Going Shopping on the Other Side -- The Recovery of the Borderlands After the Udine Agreement -- Migration Processes and Cross-Border Mobility as Conveyors of Consumerist Attitudes -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 12 Popular Hybrids the Yugoslav Way: What a Girl Would Buy for Her Pocket Money -- Girls' Fashion -- Girl's Power? -- Bricolage Entering Fashion -- References -- Part III Cultural Struggles and Social Movements -- Chapter 13 Protesting for Production: The Dita Factory Occupation and the Struggle for Justice in Bosnia and Herzegovina -- Introduction: Amnēstia as Disobedience -- To Whom Does the Oikos Belong? -- To Whom Does the Factory Belong? on Affective Compositions and Sacred Formulas-The Infra-politics of the Under-Commons -- Conclusion -- References
Abstract:
Chapter 14 The Politics of (Post)Socialist Sexuality: American Foreign Policy in Bosnia and Kosovo -- Introduction -- From Assertive Humanitarianism to Aspiring Homonationalism -- Homoemancipation Tours: Visitors from Another Time -- Tracing US Homonationalist Formations: Queer Escape Narratives from the Balkans -- (Instead of) Conclusion: Merging Queer, (Post)Socialist and Postcolonial Critique -- References -- Chapter 15 The Strange Case of Yugoslav Feminism: Feminism and Socialism in "the East" -- From Bled to Belgrade: A New Approach to the Woman's Question -- Emancipationists: The Toddler Shoes of Feminism -- Socialist Feminists, or the Rise of "Neo-Feminism" -- Liberationists: "Proletarians of the World, Who Washes Your Socks?" -- All Quiet on the Eastern Front -- References -- Chapter 16 Cultural Politics in (Post)Socialist Croatia: The Question of (Dis)Continuity -- Introduction -- Croatia 1963-2001: from Working People and Self-management to the Croatian Nation and Representative Democracy -- The Notion of Culture and Its Legal Representation After 1990 -- Conclusion: Culture-A Persistent Privileged Field of Political Investment? -- References -- Chapter 17 Neoliberal Discourse and Rhetoric in Croatian Higher Education -- Neoliberal Discourse and Higher Education -- Croatia: Postsocialist Configuration -- Croatian Bologna and Its Discontents -- One and the Same Reform -- An Analysis of Policy Texts -- Counter-Discourse -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 18 Yugoslavia After Yugoslavia: Graffiti About Yugoslavia in the Post-Yugoslav Urban Landscape -- Defining and Researching Political Graffiti and Street Art -- Denotation and Connotation of the Pro- and Anti-Yugoslav Graffiti and Street Art -- Ideological Strategies of the Graffiti and Street Art Subculture -- Conclusion: Too Little and Too Much Yugoslavia -- References
Abstract:
Chapter 19 Afterword: And so They Historicized -- Index
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