Username: Password: Remember:



birn
B92
RTK logo
RSG Banner
press online logo
beta
fonet logo





Latest Blog

Eurovision

15 May 2009 | By Simon Cottrell

Simon Cottrell It just wasn’t gay enough.


Mixed Emotions Ahead of Biden Balkans Visit
15 May 2009 |

US Vice President Joe Biden’s visit to Kosovo, Bosnia and Serbia next week is awaited with mixed emotions, much anticipation and some high hopes.

Albania Approves ODIHR Mission Chief
15 May 2009 |

After strongly contesting the appointment of the head of the international election monitoring team, the  Albanian Central Electoral Commission on Thursday approved her appointment, along with a further 39 long-term observers.

Loss of Srebrenica Victims’ Possessions Shocks Families
13 May 2009 |

Relatives of those massacred in 1995 are dismayed by reports that their loved ones’ exhumed possessions may since have been destroyed without their permission.


By Nidzara Ahmetasevic





www.mladiinfo.com
www.balkantravellers.com

Through Another Europe

London | 14 May 2009 | By Marcus Tanner
 

This collection of travelogues sheds as much light on the British culture of the authors as it does on the Balkans, writes Marcus Tanner.

When Henry Blount journeyed through Bosnia in the 1630s, two things struck him: the purity of the water and the great height of the Bosnians, which, he noted, “made me suppose them the offspring of those old Germans noted by Tacitus and Caesar for their huge size.”

Bosnians descended from Germans? Sounds doubtful. Blount’s account, the earliest in this collection of English-language travel writing on the Balkans, only suggests that from the start the English have often got their facts muddled when it comes to this part of Europe.

Never important for the English in terms of trade or empire, they would appear to be have been rare birds of passage, at least to the interior of south-eastern Europe, until the 19th century, when a few hardy pioneers like Byron made Greece and Albania fashionable.

As Through Another Europe’s editor, Andrew Hammond, explains, the sudden rush of British visitors in the mid-to-late 19th century did not necessarily lead to much enlightenment. Patronising and condescending, for the most part these visitors entertained their readers by drawing sharp contrasts between the alleged barbarism of the locals and their own, highly superior civilisation.

Much attention was lavished on incidences of banditry and on such supposedly picturesque details as women’s costumes, table manners and the appearance of markets. Little or no effort was made to describe what made these societies tick.

Hammond notes a marked change in attitude to the Balkans that took place after the First World War, after which the condescending style gives way to a more thoughtful and engaging approach. 

The excerpt from Rose Wilder Lane’s 1922 account of a journey though northern Albania, for example, is a delight. So is Walter Starkie’s 1933 description of the gypsies he met near Sibiu, and R H Bruce Lockhart’s interview with Tsar Boris of Bulgaria.

The arrival of the Second World War and the subsequent descent of the Iron Curtain more or less curtailed this school of writing. 

It was less easy now, and possibly less interesting, to interview the new regional leaders than it had been to chat to Tsar Boris. Meanwhile, the vibrant, self-contained peasant culture that had so long fascinated folklorists and sociologists began to fade as land was collectivised and the villagers herded into the towns. The opportunities for westerners to travel freely were, in any case greatly reduced in Cold War Bulgaria and Romania. In Albania they became almost non-existent.

It was the fall of the Berlin wall, revolution in Romania and the outbreak of war in former Yugoslavia that brought writers hurrying back to the Balkans. But the quality of their efforts was mixed. Many had an even shakier grasp of Balkan history than Blount had had, back in the 1630s. Once again, there was a renewed stress on the “barbarity” of the region, its senseless “tribal” quarrels, the vast and supposedly unbridgeable differences with the West, and so on.

Hammond picks out embarrassing examples of this approach, alongside some unusual items from a slightly earlier period, such as John Gunther’s description of the grim Belgrade of the late 1940s and a thought-provoking snapshot of Bulgaria from a few years earlier, just before the imposition of full-on communism. 

The book ends on a high note, with Will Myer’s delightful and sensitive account of an encounter with dervishes in the backstreets of Skopje. Clearly, some English-language writers on the Balkans got it right.

Through Another Europe
An Anthology of Travel Writing on the Balkans
Edited, Andrew Hammond
Signal books
For more information, see: www.signalbooks.co.uk       



Main News Page

Comments:
No comments have been posted.
Post comment: Please read Terms and Conditions first
 



captcha image




 
 

After a year and half of indulging in Belgrade’s many pleasures, I think like any relationship, the honeymoon period has to end. 


Nikola Lazic waxes lyrical whilst recalling the relaxing delights of a holiday spent in Prohor Pcinjski, an ancient holy place on the border with Macedonia.


Montenegro’s central bank said foreign investment in the country’s real estate market dropped 59.2 per cent in January this year, when compared to January 2008.




Wine tasters, slip on your smoking jackets, because it’s time to hit the ‘In Vino’ wine festival in Belgrade this weekend!


This collection of travelogues sheds as much light on the British culture of the authors as it does on the Balkans, writes Marcus Tanner.


Two young immigrants from the Balkans try to legalise their residence in Austria. They are prepared to do almost everything to get a European passport, including a paid marriage.