Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-vdxz6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-01T00:38:50.210Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Seeing stars: character and identity in the landscapes of modern Macedonia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

K. S. Brown*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University of Chicago, 1126 E 59th Street, Chicago IL 60637, USA

Extract

In 1978, the excavation of the Macedonian royal tombs at Vergina in north Greece gave a more physical aspect to the historical place of Philip and of Alexander the Great. These archaeological finds now have an active role in the region's politics, where the present is again being re-made by the pictures of the past.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 1994

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Alexander, S. 1979. Church and state in Yugoslavia since 1945. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Allcock, J.B. 1992. Rhetorics of nationalism in Yugoslav Politics, in Allcock, J.B. Horton, J.J. &Milivojevic, M. (ed.), Yugoslavia in transition: choices and constraints: essays in honour of Fred Singleton. New York (NY): Berg.Google Scholar
Anderson, B. 1983. Imagined communities. London: Verso.Google Scholar
Anderson, P. 1992. Fernand Braudel and national identity, in A zone of engagement. London: Verso.Google Scholar
Apostolov, A. 1962. Kolonizacijata na Makedonija bo Stara Jugoslava. Skopje: Misla.Google Scholar
Badian, E. 1982. Greeks and Macedonians, in Barr Sherrar, B. & Borza, E.N (ed.), Macedonia and Greece in Late Classical and Early Hellenistic Times (Studies in the History of Art 10): 3351.Google Scholar
Blcevskl, P. 1993. Našite Koski. Skopje: Matica Makedonska.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, P. 1982. Outline of a theory of practice. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Brailsford, H.N. 1906. Macedonia: its races and their future. London: Methuen.Google Scholar
Chapman, J. 1994, Destruction of a common heritage: the archaeology of war in Croatia, Bosnia and Hercegovina, Antiquity 68: 120–26.Google Scholar
Confino, A. 1993. The nation as allocai metaphor: Heimat, national memory and the German Empire, 1871-1918, Memory and History 5(1): 4286.Google Scholar
Durkheim, E. 1915 [1965], The elementary forms of the religious life. New York (NY): Free Press.Google Scholar
Fernandez, J. 1985. Folklorists as agents of nationalism, New York Folklore 11(14): 135–47.Google Scholar
Ford, G. 1982. Networks, ritual and ‘Vrski’: a study of urban adjustment in Macedonia. LInpublished Ph.D dissertation, Tempe (AZ): Arizona State University.Google Scholar
Friedman, V. 1975. Macedonian language and nationalism during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Balkanistica 2: 8398.Google Scholar
Goulbourne, H. 1991. Ethnicity and nationalism in post-imperial Britain. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Green, P. 1989. The Macedonian connection, in Classical bearings: interpreting ancient history and culture: 151–64. New York (NY): Thames and Hudson.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Handler, R. 1988. Nationalism and the politics of culture in Quebec. Madison (WI): University of Wisconsin.Google Scholar
Herzfeld, M. 1982, Ours once more: folklore, ideology and the making of modern Greece. New York (NY): Pella.Google Scholar
Herzfeld, M. 1992. The social production of indifference. Chicago (IL): University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Hobsbawm, E.J. & Ranger, T.O. (ed.). 1983. The invention of tradition. Cambridge: Cambridge Univesity Press.Google Scholar
Holton, M. (ed.). 1974. The big horse and other stories of modern Macedonia. Columbia (MO): University of Missouri Press.Google Scholar
Holston, J. 1988. The modernist city. Chicago (IL): University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Kapferer, B. 1989. Legends of people, myths of state. Washington (DC): Smithsonian Institute Press.Google Scholar
Karakasidou, A. 1994. Sacred scholars, profane advocates: intellectuals molding national consciousness in Greece, Identities 1(1): 3562.Google Scholar
Kldron, P. 1988. Truth whereby nations live, in Said, E.W. & Hitchens, C. (ed.), Blaming the victims: spurious scholarship and the Palestinian question. New York (NY): Verso.Google Scholar
Koćovska, J. 1992. Množinstvoto – protiv promena na imeto, Nova Makedonija (9 December): 4.Google Scholar
Mitchell, W.J.T. 1994. Imperial landscape, in Mitchell, W.J.T. (ed.), Landscape and power. Chicago (IL): University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Nedelkovski, M. 1974. The body that belonged to no one, in Holton, (ed.). Google Scholar
Perry, D. 1988. The politics of terror: the Macedonian liberation movements 1893–1903. Durham (NC): Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Poulton, H. 1993. The Republic of Macedonia after UN Recognition, RFE/RL Research Report 2/23.Google Scholar
St Erlich, V. 1984. Historical awareness and the peasant, in Winner, & Winner, (ed.). Google Scholar
Slmlc, A. 1973. The peasant urbanites: a study of rural-urban mobility in Serbia. London: Seminar Press.Google Scholar
Solev, D. 1974. The round trip of a shadow, in Holton, (ed.). Google Scholar
Swedenburg, T. 1990. The Palestinian peasant as national signifier, Anthropological Quarterly 63(1): 1830.Google Scholar
Šuplinovski, S. 1992. Zname: zamena ili izmena? Novo Makedonija (5 May): 4.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, H.R. 1952. Jugoslav Macedonia in transition, Geographical journal 118(4): 390405.Google Scholar
UNDP (UNITED NATIONS DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME). 1970. Skopje resurgent: the story of a United Nations Special Fund town planning project. New York (NY): United Nations.Google Scholar
Winner, LP. & Winner, T.G. 1984. The peasant and the city in eastern Europe: interpenetrating structures. Cambridge (MA): Schenkmann.Google Scholar