OLD DUBROVNIK, YOUNG SERBIA AND VAGUE CROATIA. MENTAL MAPS IN THE SERB-CATHOLIC IMAGINATION IN DUBROVNIK
OLD DUBROVNIK, YOUNG SERBIA AND VAGUE CROATIA. MENTAL MAPS IN THE SERB-CATHOLIC IMAGINATION IN DUBROVNIK
Author(s): Maciej CzerwińskiContributor(s): Paul Vickers (Translator)
Subject(s): Christian Theology and Religion, Cultural history, Local History / Microhistory, Culture and social structure , Pre-WW I & WW I (1900 -1919), Eastern Orthodoxy, Politics and Identity
Published by: Instytut Historii im. Tadeusza Manteuffla Polskiej Akademii Nauk
Keywords: Serb-Catholics; Dubrovnik; Dalmatia; nation-building; Serbia; Habsburg monarchy;
Summary/Abstract: This article describes the experience of the community of Serb-Catholics living in Dubrovnik in the early twentieth century. It is based primarily on an investigation of the literary and cultural periodical Srdj (1902–08). This study focuses, firstly, on the conceptual ambivalence resulting from efforts to apply linguistic criteria to determine Serbian identity and, secondly, on the efforts to construct a mental map that would serve projections of Serbian symbolic territory. While the presence of the Serb-Catholic milieu in the city was short-lived (from the mid-nineteenth century to the First World War), it nevertheless left traces on the urban landscape that typified the ambivalent formation of national identity along religious lines, as Croatians were associated with Catholicism and Serbs with Orthodoxy.
Journal: Acta Poloniae Historica
- Issue Year: 2020
- Issue No: 121
- Page Range: 143-160
- Page Count: 18
- Language: English