Yugoslavia and Macedonia Before Tito

Between Repression and Integration

Nada Boskovska author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:27th Apr '17

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Yugoslavia and Macedonia Before Tito cover

Held together by apparatchiks and, later, Tito's charisma, Yugoslavia never really incorporated separate Balkan nationalisms into the Pan-Slavic ideal. Macedonia - frequently ignored by Belgrade - had survived centuries of Turkish domination, Bulgarian invasion and Serbian assimilation before it became part of the Yugoslav project in the aftermath of the First World War. Drawing on an extensive analysis of archival material, private correspondence, and newspaper articles, Nada Boskovska provides an arresting account of the Macedonian experience of the interwar years, charting the growth of political consciousness and the often violent state-driven attempts to curb autonomy. Sketching the complex picture of nationalism within a multi-ethnic, but unitarist state through a comprehensive analysis of policy, economy, and education, Yugoslavia and Macedonia before Tito is the first book to describe the uneasy and often turbulent relationship between a Serbian-dominated government and an increasingly politically aware Macedonian people. Concerned with the question of integration and political manipulation, Boskovska gives credence to voices critical of Royal Yugoslavia and offers a fresh insight into domestic policy and the Macedonian question, going beyond traditional high politics. Broadening the spectrum of discussion and protest, she reveals the voices of a people protesting constitutional and electoral fraud, the neglect of local needs and state machinations designed to create a satellite province.

'Nada Boskovska's monograph on the history of Yugoslav Macedonia in the interwar period represents an exemplary scholarly source and is a pioneering study, which fills a serious gap in the political history of the first Yugoslavia and in the social and economic history of Southeast Europe. Moreover, it is a highly readable and welcome corrective to the limited Macedonian historiography too often prevalent in Skopje, Sofia, Belgrade and Athens today.' - Stefan Troebst, University of Leipzig

ISBN: 9781784533380

Dimensions: 216mm x 138mm x 25mm

Weight: 610g

384 pages