Tanja Petrović, “Utopia of the Uniform: Affective Afterlives of the Yugoslav People’s Army“

The compulsory service for young men in the Yugoslav People’s Army (JNA) created bonds across ethnic, religious, and social lines. These bonds persisted even after the horrific violence of the 1990s, in which many of these men found themselves on opposite sides of the front lines. In Utopia of the Uniform, Tanja Petrović draws on memories and material effects of dozens of JNA conscripts to show how their experience of military service points to futures, forms of collectivity, and relations between the state and the individual different from those that prevailed in the post-Yugoslav reality. Petrović argues that the power of repetitive, ritualized, and performative practices that constituted military service in the JNA provided a framework for drastically different men to live together and befriend each other. While Petrović and her interlocutors do not idealize the JNA, they acknowledge its capacity to create interpersonal relationships and affective bonds that brought the key political ideas of collectivity, solidarity, egalitarianism, education, and comradeship into being.


Author

Tanja Petrović is Head of the Institute of Culture and Memory Studies at the Research Center of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts. She is the author of numerous books, including A Long Way Home: Representations of the Western Balkans in Political and Media Discourses.


Table of Contents

Acknowledgments  ix
Introduction. A Silent Force That Unsettles Ruins  1
1. History, Stories, and Selves  22
2. A Barbed-Wire Utopia  37
3. The Routine  61
4. The Uniform  76
5. The Ritual  96
6. Dissolution of Form  118
Interlude. The Catastrophe  128
7. The Aftermath  134
8. Form and Life  153
9. Afterlives  173
Epilogue. An Infrastructure for Feelings  185
Notes  195
Bibliography  217
Index  231


Praise

“In Utopia of the Uniform, Tanja Petrovic offers a powerful and compelling narrative that provides a very much needed alternative reading of the end of socialist Yugoslavia. I particularly like the way the author mines the Yugoslav past for the possibilities of a utopian future. This book will shift the debate in a variety of fields.” — Kristen R. Ghodsee, author of Everyday Utopia: What 2,000 Years of Wild Experiments Can Teach Us about the Good Life

“Tanja Petrovic’s Utopia of the Uniform is a tender, provocative account of how men lived, thought, and felt in the Yugoslav armed forces. It is also about what happened to their friendships and solidarities when their country came apart at the seams. Petrovic writes about masculinity from a place outside it. In so doing, she captures something that those who live it can’t see.” — Samuel Fury Childs Daly, author of A History of the Republic of Biafra: Law, Crime, and the Nigerian Civil War


https://www.dukeupress.edu/utopia-of-the-uniform


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https://historiografija.ba/article.php?id=2351


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