The Contested Country: Yugoslav Unity and Communist Revolution, 1919-1953Harvard University Press, 1991 - 259 من الصفحات Published amid the unraveling of the second Yugoslavia, The Contested Country lays bare the roots of the idea of Yugoslav unity--its conflict with the Croatian and Serbian national ideologies and its peculiar alliance with liberal and progressive, especially Communist, ideologies. |
المحتوى
South Slav Yugoslav lands on the eve of the First World | 46 |
Occupied Yugoslavia 1941 Adapted from Stevan K Pavlo | 116 |
The banovine of Yugoslavia 1929 and the Banovina | 130 |
حقوق النشر | |
1 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
Austria-Hungary autonomy Banovina Banovina of Croatia Belgrade Bosnia Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosnia-Herzegovina Central Committee century chap Chetnik Comintern Communist Party conflict constitution creation Croa Croatian and Serbian Croatian national Croatian nationalists Croatian-Serbian Croats and Serbs cultural Dalmatia demands dictatorship Djilas economic fascist federal German government in exile groups Habsburg monarchy Herzegovina Hungarian ibid ideas ideology Illyrian Illyrianist independent interwar Italian Jovanović Jugoslavije King Aleksandar Komunističke Krnjević leaders Macedonia Maček Marković Mihailović military minister Montenegro Muslims national consciousness national question nations of Yugoslavia oppressed organization Ottoman Partisan party's peasants policies political parties Popular Front population prewar primarily Radić radical republics revolution revolutionary Serbian national Serbian Orthodox church Slavonia Slovenes Slovenian social democrats socialist South Slav Soviet Union Sporazum Starčević Stjepan Radić stranka struggle territory tian tion Tito traditions unification unity Ustashas Vojvodina workers Yugoslav Communists Yugoslav national Zagreb ZAVNOH