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[The chapter approaches the best-known Serbian and Yugoslav geographer, Jovan Cvijić, as a center of the Yugoslav geographical network, focusing on his communication with colleagues in Yugoslavia and abroad, especially with Albrecht Penck. Duančić points to Cvijić’s complex professional identities and political engagements, describes how Cvijić intertwined physical and human geography, and follows the two-decades-long development of his anthropological narrative on the Balkans and Yugoslav lands in connection to political crises that Serbia faced. The publication of La Péninsule balkanique in 1918 was the culmination of Cvijić’s narrative, the scope of which had grown to encompass not only Serbian, but entire Yugoslav, lands. As political circumstances changed, Cvijić turned his gaze from the southeast toward the northeast, from where the threat was now coming.]
Published: Aug 22, 2020
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