Vampire Nation: Violence as Cultural Imaginary (The Cultures and Practice of Violence)
معرفی کتاب «Vampire Nation: Violence as Cultural Imaginary (The Cultures and Practice of Violence)» نوشتهٔ Longinovic, Tomislav Z.، منتشرشده توسط نشر Duke University Press; Duke University Press Books در سال 2011. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
Vampire Nation is a nuanced analysis of the cultural and political rhetoric framing âthe serbsâ as metaphorical vampires in the last decades of the twentieth century, as well as the cultural imaginaries and rhetorical mechanisms that inform nationalist discourses more broadly. Tomislav Z. LonginoviÄ points to the Gothic associations of violence, blood, and soil in the writings of many intellectuals and politicians during the 1990s, especially in portrayals by the U.S.-led Western media of âthe serbsâ as a vampire nation, a bloodsucking parasite on the edge of European civilization.
Interpreting oral and written narratives and visual culture, LonginoviÄ traces the early modern invention of âthe serbsâ and the categoryâs twentieth-century transformations. He describes the influence of Bram Stokerâs nineteenth-century novel Dracula on perceptions of the Balkan region and reflects on representations of hybrid identities and their violent destruction in the works of the regionâs most prominent twentieth-century writers. Concluding on a hopeful note, LonginoviÄ considers efforts to imagine a new collective identity in non-nationalist terms. These endeavors include the emigrant Yugoslav writer David Albahariâs Canadian Trilogy and Cyber-Yugoslavia, a mock nation-state with 'citizens' in more than thirty countries.
Vampire Nation is a nuanced analysis of the cultural and political rhetoric framing 'the serbs' as metaphorical vampires in the last decades of the twentieth century, as well as the cultural imaginaries and rhetorical mechanisms that inform nationalist discourses more broadly. Tomislav Z. Longinovic points to the Gothic associations of violence, blood, and soil in the writings of many intellectuals and politicians during the 1990s, especially in portrayals by the U.S.-led Western media of 'the serbs' as a vampire nation, a bloodsucking parasite on the edge of European civilization. Interpreting oral and written narratives and visual culture, Longinovic traces the early modern invention of 'the serbs' and the category's twentieth-century transformations. He describes the influence of Bram Stoker's nineteenth-century novel Dracula on perceptions of the Balkan region, and reflects on representations of hybrid identities and their violent destruction in the works of the region's most prominent twentieth-century writers. Concluding on a hopeful note, Longinovic considers efforts to imagine a new collective identity in non-nationalist terms. These endeavours include the emigrant Yugoslav writer David Albahari's Canadian Trilogy and Cyber Yugoslavia, a mock nation-state with "citizens" in more than thirty countries Vampire Nation is a nuanced analysis of the cultural and political rhetoric framing ‘the serbs’ as metaphorical vampires in the last decades of the twentieth century, as well as the cultural imaginaries and rhetorical mechanisms that inform nationalist discourses more broadly. Tomislav Z. Longinović points to the Gothic associations of violence, blood, and soil in the writings of many intellectuals and politicians during the 1990s, especially in portrayals by the U.S.-led Western media of ‘the serbs’ as a vampire nation, a bloodsucking parasite on the edge of European civilization. Interpreting oral and written narratives and visual culture, Longinović traces the early modern invention of ‘the serbs’ and the category’s twentieth-century transformations. He describes the influence of Bram Stoker’s nineteenth-century novel Dracula on perceptions of the Balkan region and reflects on representations of hybrid identities and their violent destruction in the works of the region’s most prominent twentieth-century writers. Concluding on a hopeful note, Longinović considers efforts to imagine a new collective identity in non-nationalist terms. These endeavors include the emigrant Yugoslav writer David Albahari’s Canadian Trilogy and Cyber-Yugoslavia, a mock nation-state with “citizens” in more than thirty countries. The great vampire swindle : global cultural imaginary and the violence of "the Serbs" Bloody tales : figurations of masculinity in the post-oriental condition Sounds of blood : Yugoslavism and its discontents Locations of horror : Bosnia in the literary and political imaginary Quieting the vampire : voicing violence in the post-human age. Analyzes how the rhetoric of Yugoslav intellectuals and politicians and the U.S.-led Western media and political leadership framed the serbs as metaphorical vampires in the last decades of the twentieth century.