RURITANIA: REFLECTIONS ON AN AFTERMATH

SERBIA AND THE BALKANS: THREE CENTURIES OF EMBRACE WITH EUROPE,  [pp. 187-196]  

AUTHOR(S) / АУТОР(И): Vesna Goldsworthy

 

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DOI: 10.46793/7494.189.187G

ABSTRACT / САЖЕТАК:

Balkan nationalisms, unlike similar feelings elsewhere in Europe, continue to be described as uniquely inexplicable, a set of irrational “ancient hatreds.” That perception has remained virtually un- changed since the turn of the twentieth century. The Balkan Peninsula remains a resolutely peripheral, and an ideal foil for articulations of European superiority. Two hundred and fifty Ruritanian films were produced in the first three decades of cinema, and half of those were US productions. That amplification, which continues to this day and now includes computer games and AI-generated visual production, is at the crux of the argument presented in Inventing Ruritania (1998), my study of British literary stereotypes of the Balkans from Lord Byron up to the Cold War. The Balkans are no longer faraway places of which we know little. The persistence of Balkan stereotypes is perhaps, therefore, a product less of a lack of contact than of power relations.

KEYWORDS / КЉУЧНЕ РЕЧИ:

the Balkans, Ruritania, stereotypes

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT / ПРОЈЕКАТ:

REFERENCES / ЛИТЕРАТУРА:

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  • Goldsworthy, Vesna, Inventing Ruritania. The Imperialism of the Imagination (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1998).
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