Between Decolonial and Postsocialist Political Imagination

Redescribing Present Failures in Mostar

Authors

  • Carna Brkovic Universität Göttingen

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18452/23979

Keywords:

political imagination, postsocialism, decolonial imagination, failure, Bosnia and Herzegovina

Abstract

This paper retraces the political imagination that serves as the background of an activist-artistic-scholarly project called Mostar’s Hurqualya that commemorates the socialist heritage of the Partisan Memorial Cemetery in Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The main proposition of the paper is that postsocialist political imagination presents an epistemologi­cal and political project of re-describing the failures – those of socialist modernity as well as of the contemporary postsocialist moment – in a way that acknowledges disappointment, but still makes it possible to act. With its focus on redescribing failures, it might be different from a decolonial political imagination, understood as a project of prescribing new models, blue­prints, and examples for how to organize reality beyond the hegemonic concepts and institu­tions that have been developed within the modernity/coloniality nexus. While postsocialist and decolonial political imaginations are interwoven in complex ways since both are critical epistemological and political projects, there are also differences between them.

Author Biography

Carna Brkovic, Universität Göttingen

Čarna Brković (PhD in Social Anthropology, University of Manchester) is a lecturer in Cultural Anthropology and European Ethnology at the University of Goettingen. She explores intersections between ethics and politics in humanitarianism, LGBTIQ activism, and clientelism in Southeast Europe.

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Published

2022-02-21

How to Cite

Brkovic, C. (2022). Between Decolonial and Postsocialist Political Imagination: Redescribing Present Failures in Mostar. Berliner Blätter, 85, 33–47. https://doi.org/10.18452/23979

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