Affiliation:
1. Filozofski fakultet, Beograd
Abstract
By using certain theoretical settings of ethno-symbolic and interactionist
approach to the phenomena of nation and nationalism, this paper?s aim is to
explain and reconstruct various pre-modern forms of ethno-religious
dichotomization widely present in Serbian folk epic poetry. In that purpose,
the paper displays ideas about ?other? communities that were nurtured in the
Serbian epic poetry, where these ideas were interpreted as a reflection and
consequence of concrete socio-historical circumstances. Special attention
was given to examining the interconfessional and inter-class relations,
which could have vastly influenced the self-determination process for the
members of Serbian ethnic community. In other words, the factors of
religious affiliation, social ranking and ethnicity are recognized as key
determinants in establishing ethnoreligious dichotomization in the epic
literature. The findings of the study showed that the most pronounced and
most represented ethno-religious boundary in the epic poetry was set in
relations to the Ottomans and Islam. On the other hand, the scarcity,
incoherency or the lack of distinction of the dichotomization in relations
to non-Ottoman communities, Greeks, Bulgarians, Hungarians, ?Latins?,
Albanians and Arabs show that this boundary was not particularly defined,
unlike the one with the Ottomans, who were different not only in terms of
ethnicity, but also in terms of religion and class.
Publisher
National Library of Serbia