When in 1929 King Alexander I Karadjordjević dissolved the parliament and abolished the constitution of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, it was only the final act in a long lasting political drama which had started back in 1918. The country got a new name - the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, and it was divided into new regional units which replaced the former historical provinces. These regions became a nucleus of a new national paradigm with huge ideological loading. Architecture played major part in this new regionalist imagination of Yugoslav identity, expressing a visual language of a newly reconceptualised nation
Unlike most of the post-WWI newly established and old nation-states, the multiethnic Kingdom of Serb...
The breakup between socialist Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union in 1948 paved the way for radical soci...
The process of the formation of Serbian national identity is characterized by certain duality – the ...
Yugoslav architecture traced ideological, political and economic instructions. In parallel there was...
It is not an easy task to imagine one’s nation in the Balkans. The elusive and complex interrelation...
Since the beginning of the nineteenth century, European nations have been perennially historicized t...
Yugoslavia portrays a place of different ideological experiments that effected country’s economic tr...
textLand of the in-between explores how modern architecture responded to demands for political and i...
textLand of the in-between explores how modern architecture responded to demands for political and i...
National pavilions of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia at the Paris World Exhibitions in 1925 and 1937 were...
In 1889, on the occasion of celebrating the 500th anniversary of the Kosovo Battle (Vidovdan), the l...
This article is focused on the relation between the representative architectural culture of Belgrade...
From the nineteenth century onwards, Croatian architecture was systematically presented at Parisian ...
The Socialist Yugoslavia regime, which was established after World War II, led to innovations in man...
The paper comprises four parts. Drawing from the definition of critical regionalism presented by Tzo...
Unlike most of the post-WWI newly established and old nation-states, the multiethnic Kingdom of Serb...
The breakup between socialist Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union in 1948 paved the way for radical soci...
The process of the formation of Serbian national identity is characterized by certain duality – the ...
Yugoslav architecture traced ideological, political and economic instructions. In parallel there was...
It is not an easy task to imagine one’s nation in the Balkans. The elusive and complex interrelation...
Since the beginning of the nineteenth century, European nations have been perennially historicized t...
Yugoslavia portrays a place of different ideological experiments that effected country’s economic tr...
textLand of the in-between explores how modern architecture responded to demands for political and i...
textLand of the in-between explores how modern architecture responded to demands for political and i...
National pavilions of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia at the Paris World Exhibitions in 1925 and 1937 were...
In 1889, on the occasion of celebrating the 500th anniversary of the Kosovo Battle (Vidovdan), the l...
This article is focused on the relation between the representative architectural culture of Belgrade...
From the nineteenth century onwards, Croatian architecture was systematically presented at Parisian ...
The Socialist Yugoslavia regime, which was established after World War II, led to innovations in man...
The paper comprises four parts. Drawing from the definition of critical regionalism presented by Tzo...
Unlike most of the post-WWI newly established and old nation-states, the multiethnic Kingdom of Serb...
The breakup between socialist Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union in 1948 paved the way for radical soci...
The process of the formation of Serbian national identity is characterized by certain duality – the ...