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NATIONAL IDENTITY IN SERBIA: VOJVODINA AND A MULTIETHNIC

COMMUNITY IN THE BALKANS

SUMMARY

This book introduces a European region that not a lot has been written about in the English-
language academic literature: the Serbian autonomous province of Vojvodina. Considering
that modern Serbian nationalism was largely ‘born’ there, Vojvodina is a territory with a
historical symbolism of high significance for the development of Serbian national identity.
However, Vojvodina’s multiethnic composition and different historical experience, in
comparison to Serbia proper, also encouraged the formation of a distinct regional identity.
During the Communist era, Vojvodina’s identity was institutionally readjusted through its
establishment, together with Kosovo, as one of the two autonomous provinces within Serbia.
This book critically outlines the evolution and the redefinitions of Vojvodina’s identity
through time.

The pattern of ethnic relations in this region is highly unique. Although Vojvodina hosts
approximately 25 ethnic communities (including a sizeable and politically organized
Hungarian minority), besides the Serbian majority, it is by no means an ethnically divided
society. Alongside separate ethnic group cultures, a trans-ethnic cultural substratum, which
manifests in the form of Vojvodinian regional identity, is present. Intercultural cohabitation
has been a living reality in Vojvodina through time and it is largely to account for the lower
propensity to ethnic conflict, in comparison to other parts of the former Yugoslavia, during
the turbulent 1990s. This more ‘integrated’ pattern manifests through the lower impact of
territorial segregation and ethnic distance, as well as the higher frequency of intermarriage in
urban and rural settlements alike. This book explores in depth Vojvodina’s intercultural
realities and illustrates how these have facilitated the introduction of flexible and regionalized
legal models for the management of ethnic relations in Serbia since the 2000s. This regional
monograph also casts its focus on fresh developments (most notably, the recent arrival of war
refugees from Syria and Iraq) and measures the impact that these have been exerting on social
stability and inter-group relations in the province.

Furthermore, this book introduces a distinct variant of regionalism. By contrast to other


European regionalisms, entrenched either into a core ethno-nationalism (e.g. the Basque and
Catalan cases in Spain) or Eurosceptic/xenophobic narratives (e.g. Lega Nord in Italy),
Vojvodinian regionalism, as a sociopolitical phenomenon, has been exerting an appeal that
cuts across ethno-cultural boundaries. This is a study of ‘small places with big issues’ (yet not
a micro-history) highly recommended for political scientists and historians with an expertise
in Serbia, the former Yugoslavia, Southeast and Central Eastern Europe as well as the
thematic areas of regionalism, nationalism and European Politics.

https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/national-identity-in-serbia-
9781788313735/?fbclid=IwAR3rHNzCmDNMUqlOXLtSTe4C5WquU6FdM4avnjX2lwC6l4
2F8KHrLw5tT2g
https://www.waterstones.com/book/national-identity-in-serbia/vassilis-
petsinis//9781788313735?fbclid=IwAR2z6Bl7TyJZWpgF1bwrxqafLidYqgtlHExwdU4tRM1
cKEephdEsT7If3qM

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