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Chapter 13. The West, the Balkans and the In-Between: Bosnian Muslims Representing a European Islam
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Merima Šehagić
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS v
- Acknowledgements vii
- Introduction 1
- Chapter 1. The ‘Turkish Threat’ and Early Modern Central Europe: Czech Reflections 28
- Chapter 2. The Muslims of Bosnia and Herzegovina between Millet and Nation 42
- Chapter 3. Ambivalent Perceptions: Austria–Hungary, Bosnian Muslims and the Occupation Campaign in Bosnia and Herzegovina (1878) 63
- Chapter 4. Sleeping Beauty’s Awakening: Habsburg Colonialism in Bosnia and Herzegovina, 1878–1918 76
- Chapter 5. Th e Portrayal of Muslims in Austro-Hungarian State Primary School Textbooks for Bosnia and Herzegovina 92
- Chapter 6. Towards Secularity: Autonomy and Modernization of Bosnian Islamic Institutions under Austro-Hungarian Administration 104
- Chapter 7. Under the Slavic Crescent: Representations of Bosnian Muslims in Czech Literature, Travelogues and Memoirs, 1878–1918 121
- Chapter 8. Divided Identities in the Bosnian Narratives of Vjenceslav Novak and Rebecca West 145
- Chapter 9. Austronostalgia and Bosnian Muslims in the Work of Croatian Anthropologist Vera Stein Erlich 155
- Chapter 10. Th e Serbian Proverb Poturica gori od Turčina (A Turk-Convert Is Worse Th an a Turk): Stigmatizer and Figure of Speech 170
- Chapter 11. From Brothers to Others? Changing Images of Bosnian Muslims in (Post-)Yugoslav Slovenia 194
- Chapter 12. Exploring Religious Views among Young People of Bosnian Muslim Origin in Berlin 214
- Chapter 13. The West, the Balkans and the In-Between: Bosnian Muslims Representing a European Islam 225
- Conclusion 236
- Index 243
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS v
- Acknowledgements vii
- Introduction 1
- Chapter 1. The ‘Turkish Threat’ and Early Modern Central Europe: Czech Reflections 28
- Chapter 2. The Muslims of Bosnia and Herzegovina between Millet and Nation 42
- Chapter 3. Ambivalent Perceptions: Austria–Hungary, Bosnian Muslims and the Occupation Campaign in Bosnia and Herzegovina (1878) 63
- Chapter 4. Sleeping Beauty’s Awakening: Habsburg Colonialism in Bosnia and Herzegovina, 1878–1918 76
- Chapter 5. Th e Portrayal of Muslims in Austro-Hungarian State Primary School Textbooks for Bosnia and Herzegovina 92
- Chapter 6. Towards Secularity: Autonomy and Modernization of Bosnian Islamic Institutions under Austro-Hungarian Administration 104
- Chapter 7. Under the Slavic Crescent: Representations of Bosnian Muslims in Czech Literature, Travelogues and Memoirs, 1878–1918 121
- Chapter 8. Divided Identities in the Bosnian Narratives of Vjenceslav Novak and Rebecca West 145
- Chapter 9. Austronostalgia and Bosnian Muslims in the Work of Croatian Anthropologist Vera Stein Erlich 155
- Chapter 10. Th e Serbian Proverb Poturica gori od Turčina (A Turk-Convert Is Worse Th an a Turk): Stigmatizer and Figure of Speech 170
- Chapter 11. From Brothers to Others? Changing Images of Bosnian Muslims in (Post-)Yugoslav Slovenia 194
- Chapter 12. Exploring Religious Views among Young People of Bosnian Muslim Origin in Berlin 214
- Chapter 13. The West, the Balkans and the In-Between: Bosnian Muslims Representing a European Islam 225
- Conclusion 236
- Index 243