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Highlights
- Unearths a buried history of retributive violence that unfolded inside besieged Sarajevo In asymmetrical conflicts, how should we acknowledge suffering on the side of the perpetrators of violence?
- About the Author: Jelena Golubovic is Assistant Professor of Anthropology and International Affairs at Northeastern University.
- 224 Pages
- Political Science, Genocide & War Crimes
- Series Name: Ethnography of Political Violence
Description
About the Book
"This book unearths a buried history of violence within the 1992 to 1995 siege of Sarajevo. As Bosnian Serb forces besieged the city, Serb civilians, particularly women, became targets for retribution-but couldn't discuss their experience post-war. By tracing this silencing, this book advances a new approach to telling contentious histories of war"-- Provided by publisher.
Book Synopsis
Unearths a buried history of retributive violence that unfolded inside besieged Sarajevo
In asymmetrical conflicts, how should we acknowledge suffering on the side of the perpetrators of violence? How can we do so without losing sight of the harm they inflicted, and without relativizing the suffering of their victims? Inner Zone introduces a new approach to telling contentious histories of war and explores the political implications of refusing to extend recognition to those who suffer on the "wrong" side of a conflict.
Bosnian Serb forces held the city of Sarajevo under siege from 1992 until 1995. Inner Zone revisits this emblematic conflict from the perspective of Bosnian Serb women who remained in the city during the siege years. As Serb civilians came to be associated with the ethno-national aggressor, these women became targets of collective punishment and retribution. The war crimes committed against them have been written out of most academic and journalistic accounts of the war, and in Sarajevo, they have become a public secret. Pluralizing the monolithic story of the siege into zones of violence, Jelena Golubovic locates an inner zone of retribution within the larger outer zone of besiegement, telling a nested history that reconfigures how we think about victimhood and complicity across both sides of a conflict.
As Bosnian Serb women tell their previously untold stories through ethnographic interviews, Golubovic remains attentive to the anxious sense of exclusion that haunts them in the postwar city. While their victimization is erased from the dominant narrative of the war in Sarajevo, the Bosnian Serb ethno-nationalist elite emphasize it to claim exclusive victimhood. Inner Zone takes on the challenge of disentangling lived experiences of violence from the grip of ethno-nationalist misappropriation, arguing that a sense of misrecognition and unacknowledged injury can ultimately lead victims of the inner zone of violence to adopt ethno-nationalist narratives and goals.
Review Quotes
"This brave and brilliant book achieves what the only the best scholarship can: it teaches us about hidden workings of the world, and it insists that we rethink how we see ourselves and others."-- "Max Bergholz, Concordia University"
About the Author
Jelena Golubovic is Assistant Professor of Anthropology and International Affairs at Northeastern University.