New Perspectives on Socialist Yugoslavia: Historiographic and Memory Stakes

New Perspectives on Socialist Yugoslavia: Historiographic and Memory Stakes / Nouveaux regards sur la Yougoslavie socialiste : enjeux historiographiques et mémoriels

Journées d’études internationales
6 et 7 septembre 2016
EHESS, 190-198 avenue de France, 75013, Paris, Salle du conseil A

Seen from abroad as a unique experience, or even as a potentially exportable
model, socialist Yugoslavia in its time sparked curiosity throughout the
world.
But research covering the period 1945-1990 has lagged behind and is still in
its pioneering stages, in a context where ‘post-socialism’and
‘post-Yugoslav’are intermingled. This situation is attributable to the
specific features of the Titoist system, and especially to the violent
destruction of the Yugoslav Federation in the 1990s. However, since 2010,
research on socialist Yugoslavia has flourished. This workshop, with a strong
interdisciplinary and international bent, is intended as the first step in a
more ambitious project.

Organisation : Anne Madelain (EHESS/ CERCEC) et Frank Georgi (Paris 1/ CHS)

Centre d’études des mondes russes, caucasiens et centre-européens (CERCEC,
UMR 8083 EHESS/CNRS), Centre d’histoire sociale du XXe siècle (CHS, UMR 8058
Paris 1/CNRS), avec le soutien de Centre d’études turques, ottomanes,
balkaniques et centrasiatiques (CETOBAC, UMR 8032, EHESS/CNRS), Centre de
recherches historiques (CRH, UMR 8558 EHESS/CNRS), Karl-Franzens-Universität
Graz (Autriche),
Groupement de recherches Connaissance de l’Europe médiane

Programme

Mardi 6 septembre

9h15- 9h30 : accueil des participants

9h30-13h00 : Terrains, objets et enjeux des recherches actuelles sur la
Yougoslavie socialiste – The Fields, Subjects and Stakes of Current Research
on Socialist Yugoslavia

Igor Duda (CKPIS, Université Juraj Dobrila, Pula, Croatie)
Everyday Life, Social and Cultural History of Socialist Yugoslavia: State of
the Art and Future Directions

Goran Musić et Rory Archer (Centre d’études de l’Europe du Sud-Est,
Université Karl-Franzens, Graz, Autriche)
Between Class and Nation: Working Class Communities in 1980s Serbia and
Montenegro

Josip Mihaljević (Institut croate d’histoire, Zagreb, Croatie)
Labor Issues from Workers Perspective in Socialist Yugoslavia (1958-1971)

Nadège Ragaru, (CERI-Sciences Po, Paris, France)
Nationalization through Internationalization of the Writing of the Holocaust
in
Vardar Macedonia

Discutants : Roman Krakovsky (CERCEC, Labex Tepsis-EHESS, Paris, France) et
Alain Blum (CERCEC-EHESS, Paris, France)
14h30-17h00 : La Yougoslavie socialiste vue de l’extérieur : une circulation
internationale du « modèle » yougoslave ? / Socialist Yugoslavia Viewed from
the Outside: International Circulation of the Yugoslav ‘model’?

Tvrtko Jakovina (Université de Zagreb, Croatie)
Exporting the Yugoslav Model /The Far-reaching of Tito’s Foreign Policy

Frank Georgi (CHS, Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, France)
Yugoslav Self-Management Seen from France

Vladimir Unkovski-Korica (Université de Glasgow, Royaume-Uni)
Yugoslavia and the British Left in the Cold War

Discutant : François-Xavier Nérard (Université de Paris 1)
Mercredi 7 septembre

9h30-12h30 : Un objet de recherche dans un espace mémoriel conflictuel /A
Research Subject in a Conflictual Memory Space

Dubravka Stojanović (Université de Belgrade, Serbie)
Learning Yugoslavia: between Construction of national Identity and critical
Thinking

Anne Madelain (CERCEC, EHESS, Paris, France)
Tito, Sarajevo, Communism and “new Conflictuality” in contemporary French
Textbooks and Curricula

Mila Turajlić (Sciences Po, Paris/ Université de Belgrade, Serbie)
The Cinematic Image – Witness or Agent of History in Post-Yugoslavia?

Discutante : Marie-Elizabeth Ducreux, (CRH-EHESS, Paris, France)

12h30-13h00 : Conclusions et perspectives

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