The geography of childhood and affective archetypes: a discursive-mythological approach to the representations of serbia in british and american interwar travel accounts

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SUMMARY

    Between the two world wars Serbia was at a political and cultural crossroads, usually referred to as the transition between tradition and modernity (Stojanović, 2020, 223). Whether the authors are talking about historical periodization, or a mere construct, a striking social dynamic usually considered as modernization marked social and cultural life in Serbia (Čalić, 2004, 22). Until the end of the Balkan wars, Serbia and other Balkan countries were officially a part of the Ottoman Empire, while uprisings of South Slavs were supported and helped by Great Britain (Pavlović, 2018, 182). During the 20th . . .

     

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