Results 51 to 60 of about 1,771 (138)

The Antisemitic Exhibition “JEWS”: Antisemitism in the Ustasha

open access: yes, 2021
In the month of May in Zagreb 1942, in what was the Nezavisna Država Hrvatska – or the Independent State of Croatia – the NDH regime proudly presented the opening of the antisemitic exhibition “ŽIDOVI” – or “JEWS”. The exhibition, which was to be held in Zagreb at the Art Pavillion by Strossmayers square, aimed to present to its visitors, as the ...
openaire   +1 more source

European socialism: a blind alley or a long and winding road? [PDF]

open access: yes, 1992
This pamphlet attempts to look at socialism at its current conjuncture in terms of a longer trajectory of history.
Sheehan, Helena
core  

Spraying Religion: (Anti-)Religious Graffiti of the Post-Socialist Transition

open access: yes, 2020
This article discusses graffiti and street art concerning religion, part of the author\u27s much broader and continuous research on contemporary political graffiti and street art in post-socialist Central and Eastern Europe, from the Baltics to the ...
Velikonja, Mitja
core  

Serbian Jerusalem: Religious Nationalism, Globalization and the Invention of a Holy Land in Europe\u27s Periphery, 1985-2017

open access: yes, 2017
According to beliefs of religious nationalism, a nation is a community of ancestors and descendants, dead and living, past and present. As such, it incorporates within its territory all past and present markers of nationhood, notably historic religious ...
Perica, Vjekoslav
core  

Utopian Catholic State or Murderous Racist State? Sacralization, Myth, and Politics in the Croatian Ustasha State 1941-1945 [PDF]

open access: yes, 2022
Background Information: Ustasha was the Croatian fascist movement that ruled Independent State of Croatia or NDH from 1941-1945. It was considered a puppet state of Nazi Germany, basing much of its ideology on Nazi racial theory.
Burja, Nika   +2 more
core   +1 more source

History Culture and Banal Nationalism in post-War Bosnia [PDF]

open access: yes, 2004
This article analyses post-war history culture in Bosnia and Herzegovina using the concept of banal nationalism. Through a description of Bosnia’s post-war history culture – that part of public culture where people face the past in their daily lives ...
Torsti, Pilvi
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Menorah Review (No. 26, Fall, 1992) [PDF]

open access: yes, 1992
Evangelicals and Jews: The Odd Couple\u27s Partnership -- Psalm -- Il Duce and Der Fuhrer -- From Peor\u27s Heights to Crown Heights: The Continuity of Anti-Semitism -- Talmud -- Americanism and Judaism -- Saving Face -- Balancing -- Book ...

core   +1 more source

Picturing Jasenovac: Atrocity Photography Between Evidence and Propaganda [PDF]

open access: yes, 2018
Between 1941 and 1945, approximately 80,000 inmates, mainly Serbs, Jews and Roma, perished in Jasenovac, a brutal Ustasha–run concentration camp in the Independent State of Croatia.
Byford, Jovan
core   +1 more source

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