Figuring Out the Doha Round

Figuring Out the Doha Round

This book investigates the study of memory activism and memory of activism, emerging after conflict, as a political civic action. It examines the appearance and growth of memory activism in Serbia amid the legacies of unwanted memories of the wars of the 1990s, approaching the post-Yugoslav region as a region of memory and tracing the alternative calendars and alternative commemorative practices of memory activists as they have evolved over a period of more than two decades. By presenting in-depth accounts of memory activism practices, on-site and online, Memory Activism and Digital Practices after Conflict: Unwanted Memories analyses this evolution in the context of generational belonging and introduces frameworks for the study of #hashtag #memoryactivism, alternative commemorations and commemorative solidarity.
  • Cover
  • Table of Contents
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgements
  • Introduction
    • Memory Activism and Alternative Commemorative Practices after Conflict
    • Memory activism and memory of activism after conflict
    • Agentic activism: a positive turn in memory studies, a local turn in peace and conflict studies
    • Non-state commemorations: alternative commemorative events after conflict
    • Generational belonging in memory activism
    • Outline of the book
    • Bibliography
  • 1. Unwanted Memories of (the Wars of) the 1990s
    • Referencing the 1990s
    • The recent past is still present
    • Memory politics and public knowledge of the wars of the 1990s
    • The 1990s in the state calendar and state-sponsored commemorations
    • Memory activism after conflict: remembering the wars of the 1990s in Serbia
    • Bibliography
  • 2. ‘Not in My Name’
    • From Anti-War to Memory Activism: The First Generation
    • Memory activism as an extension of anti-war activism and the emergence of an alternative civic calendar
    • Commemorating Srebrenica in Belgrade: 10 July on the alternative calendar
    • Generational commemorative legacy
    • Bibliography
  • 3. ‘Too Young to Remember, Determined Never to Forget’
    • The Second Generation
    • A new generation, a new slogan
    • Continuity and change in the commemoration of Srebrenica in Belgrade
    • The burden of a silenced past: remembering the Suva Reka massacre and mass graves in Batajnica
    • Beyond annual commemorations: remembering Batajnica through alternative education and art
    • The Batajnica Memorial Initiative
    • Memory walks: marking and visiting sites of suppressed memory
    • Memory activism as protest: opposing the public glorification of war crimes
    • Bibliography
  • 4. Hashtag Memory Activism
    • Digital Memory Practices and Online Commemorations
    • #Hashtag #memoryactivism
    • #Sedamhiljada: from a hashtag to a banned commemoration
    • #NisuNašiHeroji: generational mnemonic claims and the post-Yugoslav space as a region of memory
    • #JesteSeDesilo: disseminating knowledge as an act of silence breaking
    • #WhiteArmbandDay: from local to regional and transnational memory activism
    • Bibliography
  • 5. Regions of Memory
    • The Post-Yugoslav Space as a Region of Memory Activism
    • Regions of memory and of memory activism
    • Regional cooperation as a ‘crowded playground’
    • Regional networks of joint action and joint claims
    • Remembering Yugoslavia and the anti-fascist struggle
    • Regional platforms for engagement with memories of the wars of the 1990s
    • Commemorative solidarity and the wars of the 1990s
    • Bibliography
  • Epilogue
    • Unwanted Pasts in an Unresolved Present
    • Bibliography
  • Appendices
    • Appendix 1 YIHR Transitional Justice Calendar
    • Appendix 2 March 2010 YIHR Announcement of ‘Action to commemorate crimes committed in Kosovo in March and April 1999’
    • Appendix 3 CPI Brochure: ‘Program of guided tours to places of “Suppressed memories”’
    • Appendix 4 Women’s Court Invitation to Hear Public Testimonies in Sarajevo, May 2015
  • Bibliography
  • Index
  • List of Figures
    • Figure 1 The divided Republic Square, 10 July 2009
    • Figure 2 The Women in Black-led commemoration on Republic Square on10 July (left); the commemoration in front of the National Assembly on11 July (right)
    • Figure 3 The Suva Reka commemoration on 26 March 2016
    • Figure 4 The street action on 26 March 2019 in Belgrade
    • Figure 5 Tweets by Dušan Mašić on 17 April 2015 (left), and on 18 April 2015 (right)with the hashtag #sedamhiljada
    • Figure 6 Graffiti that appeared in Belgrade after the #sedamhiljadacommemorative event was banned
    • Figure 7 The logo designed by Mirko Ilić for the #sedamhiljada campaign
    • Figure 8 Twitter post by YIHR Serbia, 10 December 2017
    • Figure 9 Image posted on the YIHR Facebook page, showing the #JesteSeDesilohashtag, with text announcing the launch of the War in Serbia website,1 June 2020
    • Figure 10 A Twitter post marking the 31 May 2017 online #WhiteArmbandDaycommemoration
    • Figure 11 A Twitter post sharing images of the 31 May 2017 onsite commemorationof White Armband Day in Prijedor, Bosnia and Herzegovina, using the
    • Figure 12 Drawing by Midhat Kapetanović of Vučko, Zagi, and the Pobednik (leftto right), posted on Instagram on 11 July 2020

Materias

SUSCRÍBASE A NUESTRO BOLETÍN

Al suscribirse, acepta nuestra Politica de Privacidad