Results 71 to 80 of about 8,430 (109)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Related searches:

ANALIZA SVJEDOČENJA HUSEINA KARABEGA I BOŽIDARA VULOVIĆA, PREŽIVJELIH LOGORAŠA POLITIČKOG LOGORA GOLI OTOK-OD SAZNANJA „OBIČNIH LJUDI“ DO INTERPRETACIJE I NARATIVIZACIJE KULTURE SJEĆANJA

Saznanje, 2022
U radu se analiziraju svjedočenja Huseina Karabega i Božidara Vulovića na osnovu urađenihintervjua sa navedenim preživjelim logorašima političkog logora Goli otok.
Emina Đelilović-Kevrić
semanticscholar   +1 more source

„SVEDOČENjE GOLOOTOČKE ZATVORENICE SMILjE FILIPČEV I UTICAJ KOMUNISTIČKE IDEOLOGIJE NA ŽIVOT I STRADANjE JEDNE PORODICE“

Lipar, 2022
In this paper, we have analysed the authentic testimony of Goli otok prisoner Smilja Filipčev. We interviewed Smilja during multiple encounters from 2011 to 2013. Our second source for this paper was her short book Open Door to Life.
Gordana Zalad
semanticscholar   +1 more source

FIKCIONALNA DELA O GOLOM OTOKU U SRPSKOJ KNjIŽEVNOSTI KOJU PIŠU ŽENE / ŽENE KAO GLAVNE, FIKCIONALIZOVANE JUNAKINjE U ROMANIMA O GOLOM OTOKU

Lipar, 2022
In this paper, we consider the phenomenon of fictionalization of the theme of the Goli otok in novels (mostly written by women), as a kind of collective and ideological trauma, which has been a taboo topic in socialist Yugoslavia for more than 40th years.
Slavica Garonja Radovanac
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The poetry of Goli Otok

Kwartalnik neofilologiczny
The largest facility in a network of prisons and labour camps established in Yugoslavia after the Cominform Resolution of 1948, Goli otok has inspired a vast corpus of prose texts, mostly composed by former inmates and published several decades after the
Dunja Dušanić
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Remembering Gendered Histories of the Holocaust in Yugoslavia and Goli otok in Eva Grlić's Memories and Ženi Lebl's White Violets

Slavic Review: Interdisciplinary Quarterly of Russian, Eurasian, and East European Studies
This article examines Yugoslav women's transnational memories of state terror in two autobiographical texts bearing witness to the Holocaust and corrective labor camps on Goli otok and Sveti Grgur: Ženi Lebl's White Violets (1990) and Eva Israel Grlić's ...
McKenna Marko
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Communist Prison Camps as Sites of Memory and Legacies of Dissent: Belene and Goli Otok in Bulgarian and Croatian Cultural Memory

East European Politics and Societies
This article investigates how two Communist forced labour camps, Belene in Bulgaria and Goli Otok in Croatia, became sites of memory and remain icons of political repression and state-organized torture.
Daniela Koleva, Tea Sindbæk Andersen
semanticscholar   +1 more source

From Golokaust to Happylogue

Narodna Umjetnost
This article examines the case of Ženi Lebl (1927–2009), a Yugoslav Jew, communist activist, Holocaust survivor, and prisoner of the Goli Otok camp for political opponents of the Yugoslav Communist regime; Lebl emigrated to Israel in 1954.
Katarzyna Taczyńska
semanticscholar   +1 more source

THE HOLOCAUST, INVESTIGATIVE DISCOURSE AND BARE LIFE – TRAUMA AND MEMORY

Узданица
The work will primarily explore the position and status of the Jews in the post-war Yugoslavia, especially in relation to the momentous year of 1948, which represents the final split between Tito and Stalin, the fact that caused some radical changes in ...
Katarina S. Lazić
semanticscholar   +1 more source

INFORMBIROVSKA KRIZA, IDENTITET I TRAUMA U ROMANU „POMRAČENJA“ MAGDE SIMIN

Nasledje Kragujevac
In this paper, I discuss Magda Simin’s 1 972 novel Pomračenja, which introduces a taboo topic of the Cominform period and Goli Otok prison. The novel represents Silvija, a woman who refuses to renounce her husband, arrested as ibeovac. She returns to her
Sonja V. Veselinović
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy