ABSTRACT

Resulting from a twenty-year period of research, this book seeks to challenge contradictions between the concepts of national and modern architectures promoted among the most pronounced national groups of Yugoslavia: Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. It spans from the beginning of their nation-building programs in the mid-nineteenth century until the collapse of unified South Slavic ideology and the outbreak of the Second World War.

Organized into two parts, it sheds new light onto the question of how two conflicting political agendas – on one side the quest for integral Yugoslavism and, on the other, the fight for strictly separate national identities – were acknowledged through the architecture and urbanism of Belgrade, Zagreb and Ljubljana. Drawing wider conclusions, author Tanja D. Conley investigates boundaries between two opposing yet interrelated tendencies characterizing the architectural professional in the age of modernity: the search for authenticity versus the strive towards globalization.

Urban Architectures in Interwar Yugoslavia will appeal to researchers, academics and students interested in Central and Eastern European architectural history.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

Historical outline of a Yugoslav nation and its appearance through urban architecture of the capital cities

part I|72 pages

The birth of national architectures

chapter 1|24 pages

De-Ottomanized Belgrade

chapter 2|24 pages

Croationed Zagreb

part II|131 pages

National architectures in the unified nation

chapter 4|38 pages

Imperial Belgrade

chapter 5|39 pages

Avant-garde Zagreb

chapter 6|39 pages

National Ljubljana

chapter |13 pages

Conclusion

National and urban architectures within the Yugoslav cultural space: the role of architectural historiography