Jasmila Zbanic‘s “brave drama commemorates the victims of atrocities in 1990s Bosnia, making a substantial impression despite a short running time. She commemorates the more than 3,000 Bosniaks murdered during ethnic cleansing in the Visegrad area in the 1990s, especially the women tortured in rape encampments.” Thus, her movie van be seen as a direct response to the nationalitic Potemkin Village project of another Bosnian director: Emir Kusturica. See the full review (c) variety.com 2013 Cf. the text on Kusturica in THE GUARDIAN, 2012
Archive for Emir Kusturica
“For those who can tell no tales”
Posted in Uncategorized with tags Andrićgrad, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Bosnian War, Emir Kusturica, ethnic cleansing, film, Jasmila Žbanić, review, Višegrad, war crimes on 10 September 2013 by delclemKusturica’s Nationalist Disneyland
Posted in Uncategorized with tags Andrićgrad, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Drina, Emir Kusturica, film, Ivo Andrić, Literature, Nationalism, Serbia, theme park on 23 August 2012 by delclem
“On 28 June, which is the anniversary of the battle of Kosovo, the Bosnian Serb film maker was going to inaugurate Andrićgrad: a town (theme park?) built to celebrate the work of writer Ivo Andrić. Belgrade journalist Boško Jakšić dénonces a project, which he claims is intent on instrumentalising history and memory for nationalist ends.” Full text (c) presseurop.eu 2012
Another text (c) THE GUARDIAN, 2012
“The unbearable monotony of stereotypes”
Posted in Uncategorized with tags art, Balkans, Damir Nikšić, Emir Kusturica, film, Kursadžije, Marina Abramović, Muslims, Orientalism, Stereotyping, Šejla Kamerić on 15 April 2011 by delclemDamir Nikšić is a Stockholm-based artist from Sarajevo (°1960).
His videos, installations, and performance work address
Orientalism in culture and cross-cultural psychology.


