Offers a complex consideration of the relationship of mass terror and utopianism under the fascist government of wartime Croatia.
Abbreviations
Introduction: Utopia, Terror, and Everyday Experience in the Ustasha State - Rory Yeomans
Part One: Terror as Everyday Experience, Economic System, and Social Practice
1. Anti-Semitism and Economic Regeneration: The Ustasha Regime and the Nationalization of Jewish Property and Business in Sarajevo - Dallas Michelbacher
2. Ordinary People, Extraordinary Times: Everyday Life in Karlovac under Ustasha Rule - Filip Erdeljac
3. The Engine Room of a New Ustasha Consciousness: Cinema, Terror, and Ideological Refashioning - Rory Yeomans
4. Honor, Shame, and Warrior Values: The Anthropology of Ustasha Violence - Radu Harald Dinu
Part Two: Incarnating a New Religion, National Values, and Youth
5. Apostles, Saints' Days, and Mass Mobilization: The Sacralization of Politics in the Ustasha State - Stipe Kljaic
6. Between the Racial State and the Christian Rampart: Ustasha Ideology, Catholic Values, and National Purification - Irina Ognyanova
7. Envisioning the "Other" East: Bosnia-Herzegovina, Muslims, and Modernization in the Ustasha State - Nada Kisic-Kolanovic
8. "To Be Eternally Young Means to Be an Ustasha": Youth Organizations as Incubators of a New Youth and New Future - Goran Miljan
Part Three: Terror, Utopia, and the Utasha State in Comparative Perspective
9. Forging Brotherhood and Unity: War Propaganda and Transitional Justice in Yugoslavia, 1941-48 - Tomislav Dulic
10. Recontextualizing the Facist Precedent: The Ustasha Movement and the Transnational Dynamics of Interwar Facism - Aristotle Kallis
Epilogue: Ordinary People between the National Community and Everyday Terror - Rory Yeomans
Appendix: The Origins and Ideology of the Ustasha Movement
List of Contributors
Index