Jugoslovanstvo in vprašanje narodov v južnoslovanski problematiki 19. in 20. stoletja
Yugoslavism and the National Question of the Southern Slavic Nations in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
Author(s): Jurij PerovšekSubject(s): Political history, Social history, Recent History (1900 till today), Politics and society, 19th Century, Inter-Ethnic Relations, Sociology of Politics, Politics and Identity
Published by: Inštitut za novejšo zgodovino
Keywords: Yugoslavism; national question; political programs; self-determination; The Kingdom of Yugoslavia; Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia; Yugoslav southern Slavic nations; unitarism;
Summary/Abstract: In the paper, the author deals with the questions of Yugoslavism and the national homogenisation in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. He analyses the character of the Illyrian movement, the Croatian 'pravaštvo', Strossmayer's Yugoslav idea, the Yugoslav nationalist and political concepts by F. Supil and A. Trumbić and, especially, the Serbian ideas regarding the political association of the Southern Slavic nations in the nineteenth century. He also presents the Slovenian views on this question before 1918. He further deals with the nationalist questions during the time of the first two Yugoslav states. His main conclusion is that ever since the Yugoslav idea first occurred and throughout the existence of the Yugoslav state after 1918, the federalist and unitarianist concepts were in constant confrontation. The latter, in conjunction with the hegemonist Greater Serbian policy, eventually compelled the non-Serbian nations to abandon the Yugoslav state, thereby burying the idea of the association of Southern Slavic nations. Today, the Yugoslav idea is devoid of any living contents, and the only thing the present Federal Republic of Yugoslavia has in common with it, is its name.
Journal: Prispevki za novejšo zgodovino (before 1960: Prispevki za zgodovino delavskega gibanja)
- Issue Year: 39/1999
- Issue No: 2
- Page Range: 7-24
- Page Count: 18
- Language: Slovenian