Acronyms Note on terminology List of maps Introduction 1. The origins of national indetermination (1878-1914) 2. The disillusions of Yugoslavism (1914-1941) 3. A winding search for security (1941–1945) 4. Emergence of the Muslim nation (1945–90) 5. Caught in the mortal embrace of nationalism (1990–95) 6. A Bosniak nation centred on Islam (1990-95) 7. Dreams of a nation, search for an empire (1995–2013) Conclusion Bibliography index
Offers an original narrative of the interrelation of Islam, empire and nationalism in Europe through an analysis of the post-Ottoman and post-Communist history of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Xavier Bougarel is a researcher at CETOBAC, Centre d'études turques, ottomanes, balkaniques et centrasiatiques, in Paris, France. He specializes in the former Yugoslavia and Balkan Islam. He is also co-editor of Europe’s Balkan Muslims: A New History (2017), Investigating Srebrenica: Institutions, Facts, Responsibilities (2012) and The New Bosnian Mosaic: Identities, Memories and Moral Claims in a Post-War Society (2007).
It is highly recommended to all interested in national
identity-building and the history of Islam in the Balkans.
*Reading Religion*
In this excellent book, Bougarel frequently returns to the
paradoxes, continuities and divergences between Islam, nation¬hood
and statehood in Bosnia-Herzegovina.
*Journal Southeastern Europe*
Bougarel’s book on Islam and nationhood should become required
reading for any scholar dealing with Bosnia-Herzegovina, and for
readers eager to know more about complicated nation-building
processes in the Balkans.
*Colloquia Humanistica*
[T]he most authoritative and comprehensive work to date on the
political history of the Bosniaks/Muslims of Bosnia and
Herzegovina.
*Slavonic and East European Review*
Bougarel’s book is the finest analysis of roots and evolution of
Islamic ideology in Europe, as well as a thoughtful account of the
historical and political trajectory of Bosnia in recent years. Its
ultimate input is in elucidating why and how Bosniak Muslims in
Europe turned their back on pan-Islam, endorsing instead a special
brand of Islamic nationalism, which failed other Muslim nation
states in the Middle East.
*Maya Shatzmiller, Professor of History, University of Western
Ontario, Canada*
This insightful study demonstrates the centrality of Islam and
Islamic institutions in the evolution of Bosniak national identity.
Drawing upon significant new research, Islam and Nationhood in
Bosnia-Herzegovina greatly advances our understanding of Muslim
responses to war and nation-building in the 1990s.
*Emily Greble, Associate Professor of History and East European
Studies, Vanderbilt University, USA*
This is a comprehensive and accessible presentation of a complex
situation. The author combines an expert account of the deep
history of Bosnia and Herzegovina with a knowledgeable analysis of
where the country is today. This is an essential addition to the
literature for both students and the general reader.
*Jorgen Nielsen, Professor of Contemporary European Islam,
University of Birmingham, UK*
In Islam and Nationhood in Bosnia-Herzegovina: Surviving Empires,
Xavier Bougarel once again demonstrates why he should be considered
one of the outstanding scholars of former-Yugoslavia. The book is
meticulously researched and originally argued, and methodology
(combining long-term factors and deep understanding of the
historical context with relevant theoretical discussions) is apt.
Dr Bougarel’s scholarship and his obvious urge to question, probe
and challenge established norms and conventional wisdoms about the
region set him apart from most of his peers. A decades-long
political and identity crisis in Bosnia-Herzegovina makes the book
particularly timely. It should be read not only by students of the
modern Balkans, but by anyone interested in such pertinent
questions of our era as religion, nationalism, and empire.
*Dejan Djokic, Professor of History, Goldsmiths, University of
London, UK*
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