ABSTRACT

Exploring recent configurations of social relations in post-socialist, post-war, post-Yugoslav Bosnia and Herzegovina this collection of ethnographic research turns an analytical lens on questions of sociality. Contributions based on long-term, in-depth research projects explore how people in different parts of BiH make and remake social relations and outline how their practices of sociality relate to donor-set priorities and formal human rights provisions. The book explores the socio-political concerns which have emerged within BiH, incites interdisciplinary conversations and sheds critical light on ways of engaging with these concerns and discusses forms of sociality, politics and agency which remain largely absent from the official political discourse and practice of local and foreign actors. Explicitly focusing on social relations in BiH against the historical background of both war and Yugoslav socialism, and directly placing these in relation to authoritative discourses and policies regarding BiH today brings the different strands together while the commentaries of specialists who have studied BiH in different ways explicitly situates the contribution of ethnographic work in the country.

chapter |28 pages

Introduction

New Ethnographic Perspectives on Mature Dayton Bosnia and Herzegovina

part |48 pages

Whose Voice?

chapter |15 pages

The Discretion of Witnesses

War Camp Memories Between Politicisation and Civility

chapter |14 pages

Integrating ‘During the War' in ‘After the War'

Narrative Positionings in Post-War Sarajevo

part |48 pages

Whose Flexibility?

chapter |15 pages

Affective Labour

Work, Love and Care for the Elderly in Bihać 1

chapter |15 pages

Flexibility of Veze/Štele

Negotiating Social Protection in Bijeljina

chapter |13 pages

‘The King is Naked'

Internationality, Informality and Ko Fol State-Building

chapter |3 pages

Commentary

part |36 pages

Whose Vote?

chapter |15 pages

Beyond to Vote or Not to Vote

How Young People Engage with Politics

chapter |15 pages

Future Conditional

Precarious Lives, Strange Loyalties and Ambivalent Subjects of Dayton BiH 1

chapter |4 pages

Commentary

part |35 pages

Who are ‘We' in the First Place?

chapter |16 pages

Raja

The Ironic Subject of Everyday Life in Sarajevo

chapter |15 pages

Excavating the Common Ground

Bosnian Pyramids and Post-National Communities

chapter |6 pages

Afterword

Afterwards: Beyond Regionally Based Theoretical Metonyms