Cover
Title
Copyright
Contents
Photos
Tables
Acknowledgments
Pronunciation Guide
Bosnia-Herzegovina and Neighboring Countries
Introductions
1. Meeting and Greeting the City
1. Sarajevo’s Roman Catholic Cathedral of the Sacred Heart
2. Ecce Homo sculpture and Sarajevo’s Serbian Orthodox Cathedral
3. Grave of a Bosnian šehid in a Sarajevo municipal park
4. “Pershing Missile” minaret
2. Practices of Place: Living in and Enlivening Sarajevo
5. Sarajevo’s Baščaršija
6. Šetanje on Tito Street, April 2008
7. Šetanje on Ferhadija, April 2004
8. The eternal flame to Tito’s multiethnic Partisans
9. The Vijećnica, June 2004
Bosniacs, Croats, and Serbs: The Constituent Nationsof Bosnia-Herzegovina
3. National Legibility: Lines of History, Surges of Ethnicity
10. “Don’t Forget Srebrenica”
11. Dobrinja, August 2002
12. Welcome to Republika Srpska, August 2002
13. Mostar’s newly rebuilt Stari Most, June 2004
4. Census and Sensibility: Confirming the Constitution
1. Bosnia-Herzegovina’s Population according to Ethnicity, 1991
2. Comparative Enumerations of Sarajevo, 1991 and 2002
3. Solidifying Bosniac Identity
Ostali: The Other People(s) of Bosnia-Herzegovina
5. Where Have All the Yugoslavs, Slovenes, and Gypsies Gone?
4. National Belonging in Marriage Registration Data
14. A postcard showing Gypsy children
15. Gypsy squatters
6. Sarajevo’s Jews: One Community among the Others
16. Detail, Sarajevo’s Ashkenazi synagogue
17. Zoran Mandlbaum at the Mostar gravesite of his mother
18. The Sarajevo Haggadah
7. Insisting on Bosnia-Herzegovina: Bosnian Hybridity
19. A display of T-shirts for sale in the Baščaršija
5. Bosnian and Undeclared Affiliations in Marriage Registration Data
20. A Bosnian house in Marjindvor
21. A stečak, medieval tombstone
Conclusion
8. After Yugoslavia, after War, after All: Sarajevo’s Cultural Legacies
Glossary
Notes
References
Index
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