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Preliminary communication

COMING "HOME": IDENTITY AND PLACE IN POST WAR CROATIA*

Amy Mountcastle ; State Univerity of New York, U.S.A.
Dona Danon ; University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia


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Abstract

The authors explore the concept of home and the problematics of
"returning home" in the post-war context of multi-ethnic villages in
eastern Croatia. The authors argue that ruptures in social identity are
articulated in ideas and sentiments about "home". One of the primary
questions asked is to what extent the ethno-nationalist discourses of
the state and international media enter into the reconstitution of
home and social identity. Home, for villagers attempting to
reconstruct their lives after the war, is a shifting concept that is tied
to the re-negotiation of the war-ruptured social identity space. At
present, it seems to point more often to what is missing in home and
community life than to what has been recovered. For many,
displacement and dislocation have occurred not only at the physical
level, but also at the cognitive level. Therefore, "going home"
entails much more than returning to a place and addressing material
needs. It requires a cognitive reorientation.

Keywords

displaced persons; return and repatriation; identity; ethnicity; home; Baranya; Croatian Danube Region

Hrčak ID:

33376

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/33376

Publication date:

4.6.2001.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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