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Appendix: The Origins and Ideology of the Ustasha Movement
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Abbreviations vii
- Introduction: Utopia, Terror, and Everyday Experience in the Ustasha State 1
-
Part One: Terror as Everyday Experience, Economic System, and Social Practice
- 1 Anti-Semitism and Economic Regeneration: The Ustasha Regime and the Nationalization of Jewish Property and Business in Sarajevo 43
- 2 Ordinary People, Extraordinary Times: Everyday Life in Karlovac under Ustasha Rule 61
- 3 The Engine Room of a New Ustasha Consciousness: Cinema, Terror, and Ideological Refashioning 86
- 4 Honor, Shame, and Warrior Values: The Anthropology of Ustasha Violence 119
-
Part Two: Incarnating a New Religion, National Values, and Youth
- 5 Apostles, Saints’ Days, and Mass Mobilization: The Sacralization of Politics in the Ustasha State 145
- 6 Between the Racial State and the Christian Rampart: Ustasha Ideology, Catholic Values, and National Purification 165
- 7 Envisioning the “Other” East: Bosnia-Herzegovina, Muslims, and Modernization in the Ustasha State 188
- 8 “To Be Eternally Young Means to Be an Ustasha”: Youth Organizations as Incubators of a New Youth and New Future 217
-
Part Three: Terror, Utopia, and the Ustasha State in Comparative Perspective
- 9 Forging Brotherhood and Unity: War Propaganda and Transitional Justice in Yugoslavia, 1941–48 241
- 10 Recontextualizing the Fascist Precedent: The Ustasha Movement and the Transnational Dynamics of Interwar Fascism 260
- Epilogue: Ordinary People between the National Community and Everyday Terror 284
- Appendix: The Origins and Ideology of the Ustasha Movement 300
- List of Contributors 305
- Index 309
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Abbreviations vii
- Introduction: Utopia, Terror, and Everyday Experience in the Ustasha State 1
-
Part One: Terror as Everyday Experience, Economic System, and Social Practice
- 1 Anti-Semitism and Economic Regeneration: The Ustasha Regime and the Nationalization of Jewish Property and Business in Sarajevo 43
- 2 Ordinary People, Extraordinary Times: Everyday Life in Karlovac under Ustasha Rule 61
- 3 The Engine Room of a New Ustasha Consciousness: Cinema, Terror, and Ideological Refashioning 86
- 4 Honor, Shame, and Warrior Values: The Anthropology of Ustasha Violence 119
-
Part Two: Incarnating a New Religion, National Values, and Youth
- 5 Apostles, Saints’ Days, and Mass Mobilization: The Sacralization of Politics in the Ustasha State 145
- 6 Between the Racial State and the Christian Rampart: Ustasha Ideology, Catholic Values, and National Purification 165
- 7 Envisioning the “Other” East: Bosnia-Herzegovina, Muslims, and Modernization in the Ustasha State 188
- 8 “To Be Eternally Young Means to Be an Ustasha”: Youth Organizations as Incubators of a New Youth and New Future 217
-
Part Three: Terror, Utopia, and the Ustasha State in Comparative Perspective
- 9 Forging Brotherhood and Unity: War Propaganda and Transitional Justice in Yugoslavia, 1941–48 241
- 10 Recontextualizing the Fascist Precedent: The Ustasha Movement and the Transnational Dynamics of Interwar Fascism 260
- Epilogue: Ordinary People between the National Community and Everyday Terror 284
- Appendix: The Origins and Ideology of the Ustasha Movement 300
- List of Contributors 305
- Index 309