ANTHROPOLOGICAL DIMENSION OF ETHNIC CONFLICTS Cover Image

АНТРОПОЛОШКА ДИМЕНЗИЈА ЕТНИЧКИХ СУКОБА
ANTHROPOLOGICAL DIMENSION OF ETHNIC CONFLICTS

Author(s): Milan Tripković
Subject(s): Evaluation research, Inter-Ethnic Relations, Ethnic Minorities Studies, Peace and Conflict Studies
Published by: Српско социолошко друштво
Keywords: ethnic conflicts; sacred and profane; Yugoslavia; Serbia; Bosnia and Herzegovina;

Summary/Abstract: The aim of the paper is to comprehend ethnic conflicts through their anthropological dimension, especially through Durkheim’s differentiation of sacred and profane, as well as their ambivalence. Beside Durkheim himself, the author also bases his analysis on other theorists who more or less share Durkheim’s views. Main theoretical framework of analysis is basically an attempt to develop and “apply” to that end a very inspiring anthropological standpoint of Mary Douglas. Sociological foundations from which the empirical material is extracted and on which the value of the basic hypothesis, as well as the applied notion apparatus, are illustrated and checked, are ethnic conflicts that followed dissolution of the second Yugoslavia. While the author claims neither exhaustiveness nor completeness in the explanation of such a complex phenomena, he limits the objective to verifying the hypothesis that mixture of sacred and profane is one of the causes, and at the same time manifestations, of ethnic conflicts in ethnically and religiously heterogeneous environment, that has, besides, undergone difficult and uncertain process of transformation from socialistic to capitalistic system.

  • Issue Year: 42/2008
  • Issue No: 3
  • Page Range: 307-323
  • Page Count: 17
  • Language: Serbian
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