Heavenly Serbia: From Myth to GenocideHurst, 1999 - 233 pages Heavenly Serbia traces Serbia's expansionist impulses to Serbian national mythology. The dominant myth - that of "Heavenly Serbia" - appeared soon after the Battle of Kosovo in 1389. It attributed the Serb's defeat by the Turks and the loss of the medieval Serbian state to the Serb's preference for moral salvation over military victory. By emphasizing their commitment to the heavenly kingdom and promising an eventual restoration of the Serbian empire, this myth helped the Serbs to bear their centuries-long domination by a foreign power. Though they ultimately shed the Turkish yoke and regained statehood in the nineteenth century, the Serbs, according to Anzulovic, retained this central myth in the form of feelings of superiority to their neighbors, and a sense of destiny ordaining them to become the dominant power in the Balkans. The myth has been perpetuated by political and religious leaders, historians, novelists, and artists, and has found acceptance abroad as well. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 16
Page 167
... Bel- grade that the United States would not recognize any Yugoslav republics that opted for independence . " These two sequences only confirm what could be expected by elementary logic : one The Outsiders ' Myth - Calculations | 167.
... Bel- grade that the United States would not recognize any Yugoslav republics that opted for independence . " These two sequences only confirm what could be expected by elementary logic : one The Outsiders ' Myth - Calculations | 167.
Page 169
... United Nations Protec- tion Forces - protected the Serbian conquests from Croatian coun- terattacks , and freed Serb forces in Croatia for action in Bosnia- the next stage of Milošević's campaign for a Greater Serbia . Thus the UN ...
... United Nations Protec- tion Forces - protected the Serbian conquests from Croatian coun- terattacks , and freed Serb forces in Croatia for action in Bosnia- the next stage of Milošević's campaign for a Greater Serbia . Thus the UN ...
Page 214
... United Nations and Genocide in Rwanda and Bosnia , " in Cushman and Meštrović , This Time We Knew , 128–62 ; and Michael Hertzfeld , The Social Production of Indifference : Exploring the Symbolic Roots of Western Bureauc- racy ( Chicago ...
... United Nations and Genocide in Rwanda and Bosnia , " in Cushman and Meštrović , This Time We Knew , 128–62 ; and Michael Hertzfeld , The Social Production of Indifference : Exploring the Symbolic Roots of Western Bureauc- racy ( Chicago ...
Contents
2 | 26 |
Dinaric Highlanders and Their Songs | 45 |
The Dilemmas of Modern Serbian | 69 |
Copyright | |
7 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Albanians army Balkan Battle of Kosovo became Belgrade Bishop Bosnia Bosnia-Herzegovina brutal Byzantine Catholic century Četniks Christian civilization Ćosić Croatian Croats cult Dinaric Djilas dominant Drašković Dušan Eastern enemy ethnic Europe European evil fear federal forces former Yugoslavia genocide German Greater Serbia Habsburg haiduk hard-line hatred heavenly kingdom Heavenly Serbia hero Herzegovina historian human Ibid idea Islamic Jasenovac Karadžić killed King knife Kočović leader massacres military Miloš Montenegrin moral Mountain Wreath Muslims myth nationalist Nazi Njegoš novel Obilić Obradović Ottoman Empire Pan-Serbism Partisans patriarch Pavić poem political Popović population Prince Lazar Prince Marko published Ranković regime religion religious republics Russian Saint Sava Sarajevo Serbian church Serbian culture Serbian Empire Serbian national Serbian Orthodox Church Serbs Slavs Slobodan Milošević Slovenia songs south Slavic Sultan territory tion Tito Tito's traditional Turks Ustaša Velimirović victims Vid's Day violence Vuk Karadžić Western Zagreb Žerjavić