Skip to the main content

Original scientific paper

https://doi.org/10.20901/pm.56.3-4.09

Collective Memory and an Interpretative Approach: The Struggle over Kosovo’s Independence as an Ideational Background for Contemporary Serbia’s Foreign Policy Choices

Faris Kočan orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-2649-3929 ; Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia


Full text: english pdf 346 Kb

page 200-217

downloads: 1.007

cite


Abstract

Contrary to the common understanding that collective memory functions as a driver for fostering domestic peace, stability, a common national identity, and serves as a cornerstone for the realisation of specific national goals, our aim is to show how collective memory is understood as a constitutive element of foreign policy narratives and how memory can influence foreign policy choices (Anderson, 1983; Gillis, 199 4; Hobsbawm and Ranger, 1983; Bodnar, 1992; Schudson, 1993; Dian, 2017). Building on the work of Müller (2002), Bell (2010), Langenbacher and Shain (2010), Resende and Budryte (2014), Dian (2017) and Bachleitner (2018), we will argue that Serbia’s foreign policy choice in 2013 to sign the agreement with Kosovo is best understood with the help of an interpretative approach to foreign policy, as this issue de facto reflected the continuation of the role of sacrifice within Serbian collective memory. A narrative of victimisation was used to efficiently bridge the ‘guilt’ and tie it to the notion of great powers’ intervention. This article also examines the paradox of Serbia’s endeavours to hold on to Kosovo by looking into how the struggle over the nation’s past provides the fundamental ideational background for contemporary foreign policy choices.

Keywords

Collective Memory; Interpretative Approach; Foreign Policy Choices; Narratives; Myth

Hrčak ID:

235367

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/235367

Publication date:

11.3.2020.

Visits: 2.013 *