Peripheral Empire, Internal Colony: Yugoslav National Pavilions at the Paris World Exhibitions in 1925 and 1937
Само за регистроване кориснике
2008
Чланак у часопису (Објављена верзија)

Метаподаци
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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 comprised substantial set of values and a sharp distinction of opposed cultural entities―one central and progressive, the other peripheral and traditional―which reflected permanent ties of Yugoslav elites to ideological heritage of culture of imperialism. Thus, architectural identity of the Yugoslav pavilions, selection of the artifacts displayed and, primarily, relation with their Bosnian “internal satellites” are symptomatic examples of particular ideology that otherwise shaped societal, political and economic structure of the first South Slavic state.
Кључне речи:
Yugoslavia / Ephemeral architecture / World Exhibitions / Yugoslavism / Imperialism / Internal colonialism / National identity / NationalismИзвор:
Centropa, 2008, 8, 2, 186-197Издавач:
- New York : Centropa
Институција/група
Arhitektonski fakultetTY - JOUR AU - Ignjatović, Aleksandar PY - 2008 UR - https://raf.arh.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1036 AB - 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 comprised substantial set of values and a sharp distinction of opposed cultural entities―one central and progressive, the other peripheral and traditional―which reflected permanent ties of Yugoslav elites to ideological heritage of culture of imperialism. Thus, architectural identity of the Yugoslav pavilions, selection of the artifacts displayed and, primarily, relation with their Bosnian “internal satellites” are symptomatic examples of particular ideology that otherwise shaped societal, political and economic structure of the first South Slavic state. PB - New York : Centropa T2 - Centropa T1 - Peripheral Empire, Internal Colony: Yugoslav National Pavilions at the Paris World Exhibitions in 1925 and 1937 VL - 8 IS - 2 SP - 186 EP - 197 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_1036 ER -
@article{ author = "Ignjatović, Aleksandar", year = "2008", abstract = "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 comprised substantial set of values and a sharp distinction of opposed cultural entities―one central and progressive, the other peripheral and traditional―which reflected permanent ties of Yugoslav elites to ideological heritage of culture of imperialism. Thus, architectural identity of the Yugoslav pavilions, selection of the artifacts displayed and, primarily, relation with their Bosnian “internal satellites” are symptomatic examples of particular ideology that otherwise shaped societal, political and economic structure of the first South Slavic state.", publisher = "New York : Centropa", journal = "Centropa", title = "Peripheral Empire, Internal Colony: Yugoslav National Pavilions at the Paris World Exhibitions in 1925 and 1937", volume = "8", number = "2", pages = "186-197", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_1036" }
Ignjatović, A.. (2008). Peripheral Empire, Internal Colony: Yugoslav National Pavilions at the Paris World Exhibitions in 1925 and 1937. in Centropa New York : Centropa., 8(2), 186-197. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_1036
Ignjatović A. Peripheral Empire, Internal Colony: Yugoslav National Pavilions at the Paris World Exhibitions in 1925 and 1937. in Centropa. 2008;8(2):186-197. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_1036 .
Ignjatović, Aleksandar, "Peripheral Empire, Internal Colony: Yugoslav National Pavilions at the Paris World Exhibitions in 1925 and 1937" in Centropa, 8, no. 2 (2008):186-197, https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_1036 .