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Peripheral Empire, Internal Colony: Yugoslav National Pavilions at the Paris World Exhibitions in 1925 and 1937
(New York : Centropa, 2008)
National pavilions of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia at the Paris World Exhibitions in 1925 and 1937 were conceived to represent the new state and its culture as both prosperous and authentic. Elaborated exhibition policy ...
Architecture, Urban Development, and the Yugoslavization of Belgrade, 1850-1941
(New York : Centropa, 2009)
This article is focused on the relation between the representative architectural culture of Belgrade and the ideology of Yugoslavism between 1918 and 1941, a period that spans the life of the first Yugoslav state, and is ...
Out of the Sands, to Span the Future: The Architectural Image of Yugoslav Socialism in Belgrade
(New York, N.Y. : Centropa, 2013)
After the the Second World War, the new socialist Yugoslavia was governed by the Communist Party which split with the Cominform in 1948, causing the country to embark on a long-lasting process of forging its own version ...