J6-9660 — Final report
1.
National identity as imperial legacy / Bojan Baskar

The paper proposed some elements for theorizing the national identity as imperial legacy

B.03 Paper at an international scientific conference

COBISS.SI-ID: 41925730
2.
Lamberger Khatib, Maja. An Arab Club in Slovenia: A Place where social identifications are redefined. PhD Dissertation / Bojan Baskar

The PhD Dissertation deals with a community of Arab immigrants in Slovenia, their transnational practices and cultural hybridization.

D.09 Tutoring for postgraduate students

COBISS.SI-ID: 41925730
3.
At home in the world, tourism and cosmopolitan sensibilities in Montenegro.

The paper deals with the process of how the internalization of difference that enables cosmopolitan sensibilitiesis is being translated into dialogical imagination reflected in contemporary tourism practices in Montenegro.

B.03 Paper at an international scientific conference

COBISS.SI-ID: 1282270
4.
Death of Exile: Social Memory and Narratives of Political Exile in Slovenian Diaspora in Argentina / Jaka Repič

The paper discussed persistence and role of social memories of exile after the WWII in the Slovene disporic community in Argentina. Social memories of war, post-war executions, exile from homeland, life in refugee camps and migration to Argentina are implicit to life of many Slovenes in Argentina and often represent the painful part of their social identity. They are expressed in numerous written and oral accounts, artistic works, publications, even in the textbooks and curriculum of the community’s schools. Their transfer to younger generations enable reconstruction of diasporic identities.

B.03 Paper at an international scientific conference

COBISS.SI-ID: 43260002
5.
Anthropologists, cosmopolitans and other parochials

The state of the art of the concept of cosmopolitanism in anthropology was succintly and critically analyzed. It was shown that anthropology largely operates with a seriously reduced and often conformist notion of cosmopolitanism. This notion is in most cases bereft of its political and ethical dimension. It was shown that such limitation to a reductionist concept contributes to making anthropology parochial.

B.03 Paper at an international scientific conference

COBISS.SI-ID: 44405858