Article
Publicly Available
Coming to Terms with Horror
The ‘Ghosts’ of the ‘ex-Yugoslav’ Wars and Psycho-politics after Communism
-
Fatima Festić
Published/Copyright:
April 30, 2015
Published Online: 2015-04-30
Published in Print: 2015-05-01
© 2015 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Part One: Chinese Cultural Signs and Sign Theories
- The Standardization of Chinese Characters
- Racing for the Target
- Part Two: Western Cultural Signs and Sign Theories
- The Mirror in-between Picture and Mind
- Coming to Terms with Horror
- Nigerian University Lecturers as Symbolic Icons
- Part Three: Interactions between Chinese and Western Semiotics
- Semiotic Confusion in the Phenomenology of Perception
Keywords for this article
commonality;
memory;
the everyday;
trauma;
war-horrors
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Part One: Chinese Cultural Signs and Sign Theories
- The Standardization of Chinese Characters
- Racing for the Target
- Part Two: Western Cultural Signs and Sign Theories
- The Mirror in-between Picture and Mind
- Coming to Terms with Horror
- Nigerian University Lecturers as Symbolic Icons
- Part Three: Interactions between Chinese and Western Semiotics
- Semiotic Confusion in the Phenomenology of Perception