Balkanism Revisited: Overcoming the Old Western Stigma of the Balkans

At various points in history the Balkans were a vivid locus of intersection among different cultures, religions, civilizations, and ideologies. The view of this region as a threshold of contact and mixture fuels opposing discursive practices either to champion a Balkan cultural pre-eminence or to...

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Main Author: Ivan Dodovski
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University American College Skopje 2018-12-01
Series:AICEI Proceedings
Online Access:http://www.aicei.uacs.edu.mk/document/6ce588eb-0df8-0be5-b047-85c4b9409c23
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author Ivan Dodovski
author_facet Ivan Dodovski
author_sort Ivan Dodovski
collection DOAJ
description At various points in history the Balkans were a vivid locus of intersection among different cultures, religions, civilizations, and ideologies. The view of this region as a threshold of contact and mixture fuels opposing discursive practices either to champion a Balkan cultural pre-eminence or to justify its exclusion from Europe. Though claimed by the local nations as ‘the cradle of civilization’, for Western imagining the region has featured as “part of Europe, yet not of it” (Mazower, 2000). In view of the Ottoman legacy, the West has construed the Balkans as an ambiguous borderland, not as an oriental Other but rather as “an incomplete self” (Todorova, 1997) which is denied “an access in the European sphere of modernity” (Norris, 1999). This negative demi-orientalizing discourse - called ‘Balkanism’ by Todorova (1997) - which stigmatized the Balkans as a vortex of stagnation and violence has been thought to fade away with the integration of the Balkan countries into the European Union. Still, a recent term, ‘Western Balkans’, invented as a seeming mask of political correctness, seems to testify to a prevailing stigma and to the obstacles to the process of European integration. This paper reflects on this stigma, suggesting that the European integration of the Balkans may not be simply subsumed to their strained acculturation within the imagined Western paradigm. Instead, the embracing of the Balkan cultural legacies and identities can mean a new vision of Europe as a perichorestic project where different cultures do not blend but coinhere.
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spelling doaj.art-a99e1860955e44a1b4509926c54942392022-12-21T22:52:05ZengUniversity American College SkopjeAICEI Proceedings2671-37132671-37132018-12-01131https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4553638Balkanism Revisited: Overcoming the Old Western Stigma of the BalkansIvan DodovskiAt various points in history the Balkans were a vivid locus of intersection among different cultures, religions, civilizations, and ideologies. The view of this region as a threshold of contact and mixture fuels opposing discursive practices either to champion a Balkan cultural pre-eminence or to justify its exclusion from Europe. Though claimed by the local nations as ‘the cradle of civilization’, for Western imagining the region has featured as “part of Europe, yet not of it” (Mazower, 2000). In view of the Ottoman legacy, the West has construed the Balkans as an ambiguous borderland, not as an oriental Other but rather as “an incomplete self” (Todorova, 1997) which is denied “an access in the European sphere of modernity” (Norris, 1999). This negative demi-orientalizing discourse - called ‘Balkanism’ by Todorova (1997) - which stigmatized the Balkans as a vortex of stagnation and violence has been thought to fade away with the integration of the Balkan countries into the European Union. Still, a recent term, ‘Western Balkans’, invented as a seeming mask of political correctness, seems to testify to a prevailing stigma and to the obstacles to the process of European integration. This paper reflects on this stigma, suggesting that the European integration of the Balkans may not be simply subsumed to their strained acculturation within the imagined Western paradigm. Instead, the embracing of the Balkan cultural legacies and identities can mean a new vision of Europe as a perichorestic project where different cultures do not blend but coinhere.http://www.aicei.uacs.edu.mk/document/6ce588eb-0df8-0be5-b047-85c4b9409c23
spellingShingle Ivan Dodovski
Balkanism Revisited: Overcoming the Old Western Stigma of the Balkans
AICEI Proceedings
title Balkanism Revisited: Overcoming the Old Western Stigma of the Balkans
title_full Balkanism Revisited: Overcoming the Old Western Stigma of the Balkans
title_fullStr Balkanism Revisited: Overcoming the Old Western Stigma of the Balkans
title_full_unstemmed Balkanism Revisited: Overcoming the Old Western Stigma of the Balkans
title_short Balkanism Revisited: Overcoming the Old Western Stigma of the Balkans
title_sort balkanism revisited overcoming the old western stigma of the balkans
url http://www.aicei.uacs.edu.mk/document/6ce588eb-0df8-0be5-b047-85c4b9409c23
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