The author of this paper describes commemorations prepared by emigrants from the Julian March used in their irredentist propaganda campaigns to eliminate the Rappalo border and annex the Julian March to the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in the interwar period.
COBISS.SI-ID: 1877971
The monograph describes the period from the second half of the 19th century onwards, when national conflicts emerged in Primorska, then takes into account the two decades of the fascist regime as the generator of aggression on the “both sides”, i. e. the Italian attack on Yugoslavia in April 1941, the consequences of the Italian capitulation, which led to the first wave of “foibe" in Istria, the consequences of the war in Venezia Giulia, where the Yugoslav authorities began to make arrests, deportations and executions ("foibe" after May 1, 1945).
COBISS.SI-ID: 1694931
The author of this article examines how the authorities took advantage of the successive celebrations taking place across Italy commemorating the third anniversary of the victory in World War I electing to erect a memorial to their Unknown Soldier and how Slovenes living in the Julian March responded to Italian commemorations of the Unknown Soldier. Even though the authorities stressed the need for ceremonies to remain modest and to show reverence for fallen soldiers, narrative practices and symbols were nevertheless imbued with nationalist ideas.
COBISS.SI-ID: 1877715
This paper focuses on the theoretical aspects of investigating borderness and outlines the development of the field - so called border studies - which has emerged in the last decades. The author discusses how the theoretical and methodological approaches of the border studies can be applied to the formation of ethnic identities, nation-states and borders.
COBISS.SI-ID: 1821651
Author presents in the article the overview and statistics of the emigrations from the Julian March between the World War I and World War II. Julian march remains the synonym for the divided region, divided memory and (too) often also two divided historiographies. It is a typical case of the area which has been defined by the »loss« of presumably »undisputed national territory«– Italian in the East, Slovenian in the West.
COBISS.SI-ID: 1882579