EUNAMUS Project: European national museums: Identity politics, the uses of the past and the European citizen. EU FP Grant Agreement, Seventh Framework Programme

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EUNAMUS Project: European national museums: Identity politics, the uses of the past and the European citizen. EU FP Grant Agreement, Seventh Framework Programme

Authors

Publications

National Museums in Serbia: A Story of Intertwined Identities

Ignjatović, Aleksandar; Manojlović Pintar, Olga

(Linköping: Linköping University Press, 2011)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Ignjatović, Aleksandar
AU  - Manojlović Pintar, Olga
PY  - 2011
UR  - https://raf.arh.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/828
AB  - In our paper, we are analyzing five museums as the comparative objects of research aimed at
exploring the processes of identity- and state-building in Serbia over the course of the last two
centuries. These museums are: the National Museum, the Museum of Contemporary Art, the
Museum of Yugoslav History, the Museum of African Art, and the Museum of the Victims of
Genocide. We defined these museums in terms of the official interpretational discourses and the
roles they perform in society both in synchronic and diachronic terms — the latter in particular
often being expressed by a range of meanings and functions. These museums have been chosen
for closer examination because they represent rather paradigmatic examples of both the
institutions and narrative-producers, within the process of identity and state building in Serbia,
which have been developed over the course of last two centuries. We analyzed the periods of
nineteenth century nation-state building, as well as the twentieth century formation of Yugoslavia
and the construction of socialism. Special attention, however, was put on contemporary Serbian
society and the relationships between the museum protagonists and museum narratives. Surely,
an integral part of the research includes a number of changes and transitions within museum
policies and narratives, along with hidden, ‘deaf’ historical events or cultural phenomena that
have not been represented in Serbian museums so far.
The main analytical points and conclusions of the research are: the national museums in
Serbia have played important roles within the complexity of representational discourse, which
included the nation-building processes. Museum practices constructed national identity as a
multifaceted entity, being based on a variety of perspectives: historical, archaeological,
ethnological, anthropological, artistic and geographical. However, the museums have produced
changeable visions of collective identity, mainly as a result of ideological and political context.
Yet museum practices have not merely reflected certain ideological frameworks and political
realities, but rather represented constitutive elements of ideological and political context.
Secondly, our analysis is based on a wider understanding of the term ‘national museum’ and
the explanation of the museum network in Serbia, as a complex, interdependent system of
policies and narratives, which have a crucial role in the process of identity-building in Serbia. The
network has been structured according to the simultaneity of several metanarratives: revolution,
state-building, modernization/Europeanization, national authenticity/indigenousness, etc.
Finally, our analysis shows that museum policies and narratives have been based on three
general paradigms related to nation- and state-construction processes, each of them being heavily
dependent upon interpretational discourse and firmly anchored to ideological and political
context. The first one is the paradigm of exceptionalism and uniqueness; the second is the one
that supports a rather mediatory concept of national identity, and the third paradigm establishes
new interpretations of different historical processes.
PB  - Linköping: Linköping University Press
C3  - Building national museums in Europe 1750-2010 : conference proceedings from EuNaMus, European National Museums: Identity Politics, the Uses of the Past and the European Citizen, Bologna 28-30 April 2011
T1  - National Museums in Serbia: A Story of Intertwined Identities
SP  - 779
EP  - 815
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_828
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Ignjatović, Aleksandar and Manojlović Pintar, Olga",
year = "2011",
abstract = "In our paper, we are analyzing five museums as the comparative objects of research aimed at
exploring the processes of identity- and state-building in Serbia over the course of the last two
centuries. These museums are: the National Museum, the Museum of Contemporary Art, the
Museum of Yugoslav History, the Museum of African Art, and the Museum of the Victims of
Genocide. We defined these museums in terms of the official interpretational discourses and the
roles they perform in society both in synchronic and diachronic terms — the latter in particular
often being expressed by a range of meanings and functions. These museums have been chosen
for closer examination because they represent rather paradigmatic examples of both the
institutions and narrative-producers, within the process of identity and state building in Serbia,
which have been developed over the course of last two centuries. We analyzed the periods of
nineteenth century nation-state building, as well as the twentieth century formation of Yugoslavia
and the construction of socialism. Special attention, however, was put on contemporary Serbian
society and the relationships between the museum protagonists and museum narratives. Surely,
an integral part of the research includes a number of changes and transitions within museum
policies and narratives, along with hidden, ‘deaf’ historical events or cultural phenomena that
have not been represented in Serbian museums so far.
The main analytical points and conclusions of the research are: the national museums in
Serbia have played important roles within the complexity of representational discourse, which
included the nation-building processes. Museum practices constructed national identity as a
multifaceted entity, being based on a variety of perspectives: historical, archaeological,
ethnological, anthropological, artistic and geographical. However, the museums have produced
changeable visions of collective identity, mainly as a result of ideological and political context.
Yet museum practices have not merely reflected certain ideological frameworks and political
realities, but rather represented constitutive elements of ideological and political context.
Secondly, our analysis is based on a wider understanding of the term ‘national museum’ and
the explanation of the museum network in Serbia, as a complex, interdependent system of
policies and narratives, which have a crucial role in the process of identity-building in Serbia. The
network has been structured according to the simultaneity of several metanarratives: revolution,
state-building, modernization/Europeanization, national authenticity/indigenousness, etc.
Finally, our analysis shows that museum policies and narratives have been based on three
general paradigms related to nation- and state-construction processes, each of them being heavily
dependent upon interpretational discourse and firmly anchored to ideological and political
context. The first one is the paradigm of exceptionalism and uniqueness; the second is the one
that supports a rather mediatory concept of national identity, and the third paradigm establishes
new interpretations of different historical processes.",
publisher = "Linköping: Linköping University Press",
journal = "Building national museums in Europe 1750-2010 : conference proceedings from EuNaMus, European National Museums: Identity Politics, the Uses of the Past and the European Citizen, Bologna 28-30 April 2011",
title = "National Museums in Serbia: A Story of Intertwined Identities",
pages = "779-815",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_828"
}
Ignjatović, A.,& Manojlović Pintar, O.. (2011). National Museums in Serbia: A Story of Intertwined Identities. in Building national museums in Europe 1750-2010 : conference proceedings from EuNaMus, European National Museums: Identity Politics, the Uses of the Past and the European Citizen, Bologna 28-30 April 2011
Linköping: Linköping University Press., 779-815.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_828
Ignjatović A, Manojlović Pintar O. National Museums in Serbia: A Story of Intertwined Identities. in Building national museums in Europe 1750-2010 : conference proceedings from EuNaMus, European National Museums: Identity Politics, the Uses of the Past and the European Citizen, Bologna 28-30 April 2011. 2011;:779-815.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_828 .
Ignjatović, Aleksandar, Manojlović Pintar, Olga, "National Museums in Serbia: A Story of Intertwined Identities" in Building national museums in Europe 1750-2010 : conference proceedings from EuNaMus, European National Museums: Identity Politics, the Uses of the Past and the European Citizen, Bologna 28-30 April 2011 (2011):779-815,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_828 .