556
Views
4
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Writing Place after Conflict: Exhausting a Square in Sarajevo

Pages 431-450 | Received 16 Dec 2016, Accepted 03 Apr 2017, Published online: 09 Jun 2017

REFERENCES

  • Arsenijević, D. 2010. Forgotten future: The politics of poetry in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Baden-Baden, Germany: Nomos.
  • Arsenijević, D. 2011. Mobilising unbribable life: The politics of contemporary poetry in Bosnia and Herzegovina. In Towards a new literary humanism, ed. A. Mousley, 166–80. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Arsenijević, D..2014. Unbribable Bosnia and Herzegovina: The struggle for the commons. Baden-Baden, Germany: Nomos.
  • Becker, H. 2001. George Perec’s experiments in social description. Ethnography 2:63–76.
  • Bellos, D. 1993. Georges Perec: A life in words. London: Harvill.
  • Benjamin, W. 2016. The storyteller. London: Verso.
  • Bennett, C. 2016. Bosnia’s paralysed peace. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Berger, J. 1972. Ways of seeing. London: Penguin.
  • Bieber, F. 2006. Post-war Bosnia: Ethnicity, inequality and public sector governance. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Blanchot, M. 1989. The space of literature. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
  • Calvino, I. 1974. Invisible cities. Orlando, FL: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.
  • Campbell, D. 1998. National deconstruction: Violence, identity, and justice in Bosnia. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Campbell, D. 1999. Apartheid cartography: The political anthropology and spatial effects of international diplomacy in Bosnia. Political Geography 18:395–435.
  • Carter, F. W., ed. 1977. An historical geography of the Balkans. London: Academic.
  • Cosgrove, D. 1985. Social formation and the symbolic landscape. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.
  • Cosgrove, D. 2001. Apollo’s eye: A cartographic genealogy of the earth in the Western imagination. Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press.
  • Cosgrove, D. 2008. Geography and vision: Seeing, imagining and representing the world. London: I. B. Taurus.
  • Cosgrove, D., and S. Daniels. 1988. The iconography of landscape. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
  • Cosgrove, D., and P. Jackson. 1987. New directions in cultural geography. Area 19 (2): 95–101.
  • Crampton, J. 1996. Bordering on Bosnia. GeoJournal 39 (4): 353–61.
  • Cresswell, T. 2010. New cultural geography—An unfinished project? Cultural Geographies 17 (2): 169–74.
  • Daniels, S. 2012. To the end of days: Narrating landscape and environment. Cultural Geographies 19 (1): 3–9.
  • de Certeau, M. 1984. The practice of everyday life. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • DeSilvey, C. 2006. Observed decay: Telling stories with mutable things. Journal of Material Culture 11 (3): 318–38.
  • DeSilvey, C. 2007. Salvage memory: Constellating material histories on a hardscrabble homestead. Cultural Geographies 14 (3): 401–24.
  • DeSilvey, C. 2010. Memory in motion: Soundings from Milltown, Montana. Social and Cultural Geography 11 (5): 491–510.
  • DeSilvey, C. 2012. Making sense of transience: An anticipatory history. Cultural Geographies 19 (1): 30–53.
  • Dewsbury, J. D., P. Harrison, M. Rose, and J. Wylie. 2002. Enacting geographies. Geoforum 33 (4): 437–40.
  • Dubow, J. 2001. Rites of passage: Travel and the materiality of vision at the Cape of Good Hope. In Contested landscapes: Movement, exile and place, ed. B. Bender and M. Winer, 241–55. Oxford, UK: Berg.
  • Dubow, J. 2011. Still-life, after-life: W. G. Sebald and the demands of landscape. In Envisioning landscapes, making worlds: Geography and the humanities, ed. S. Daniels, D. DeLyser, J. N. Entrikin, and D. Richardson, 188–98. London and New York: Routledge.
  • Edensor, T. 2000. Walking in the British countryside. Body and Society 6 (3–4): 81–106.
  • Edensor, T. 2005. The ghosts of industrial ruins: Ordering and disordering memory in excessive space. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 23:829–49.
  • Edensor, T. 2008. Mundane hauntings: Commuting through the phantasmagoric working class spaces of Manchester, England. Cultural Geographies 15:313–33.
  • Garrett, B. 2013. Explore everything: Place-hacking and the city. London: Verso.
  • Glenny, M. 1992. The fall of Yugoslavia. London: Penguin.
  • Glenny, M. 1999. The Balkans, 1804–1999: Nationalism, war and the great powers. London: Granta.
  • Goldsworthy, V. 1998. Inventing Ruritania: The imperialism of the imagination. London: Yale University Press.
  • Hemon, A. 2013. The book of my lives. London: Picador.
  • Hobbs, D. 2015. An attempt at an inexhaustible site in Lower Manhattan. Critical Military Studies 1 (1): 88–98.
  • Horvat, S., and I. Štiks, eds. 2014. Welcome to the desert of post-socialism: Radical politics after Yugoslavia. London: Verso.
  • Ingold, T. 1993. The temporality of the landscape. World Archaeology 25:152–74.
  • Jeffrey, A. 2006. Building state capacity in post-conflict Bosnia and Herzegovina: The case of Brčko District. Political Geography 25:203–27.
  • Jeffrey, A. 2012. The improvised state: Sovereignty, performance and agency in Dayton Bosnia. London: Wiley Blackwell.
  • Jergović, M. 2004. Sarajevo Marlboro. Brooklyn, NY: Archipelago Books.
  • Jones, O. 2005. An emotional ecology of memory, self and landscape. In Emotional geographies, ed. J. Davidson, L. Bondi, and M. Smith, 205–18. Oxford, UK: Ashgate.
  • Lefebvre, H. 2004. Rhythmanalysis: Space, time, and everyday life. London: Continuum.
  • Little, A., and L. Silber. 1996. The death of Yugoslavia. London: Penguin.
  • Lorimer, H. 2003. Telling small stories: Spaces of knowledge and the practice of geography. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 28 (2): 197–217.
  • Lorimer, H. 2006. Herding memories of humans and animals. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 24:497–518.
  • Lorimer, H. 2012. Memoirs for the Earth: Jacquetta Hawkes’s literary experiments in deep time. Cultural Geographies 19 (1): 87–106.
  • Lorimer, H., and J. Wylie. 2010. Loop (a geography). Performance Research 15 (4): 6–13.
  • Maddrell, A., and J. Sidaway. 2010. Deathscapes: Spaces for death, dying, mourning and remembrance. London and New York: Routledge.
  • Matless, D. 2008. A geography of ghosts: The spectral landscapes of Mary Butts. Cultural Geographies 15 (3): 335–58.
  • Matless, D. 2010. Describing landscape: Regional sites. Performance Research 15 (4): 72–82.
  • Matless, D. 2014. In the nature of landscape: Cultural geography on the Norfolk Broads. London: Wiley Blackwell.
  • Mazower, M. 2002. The Balkans: From the end of Byzantium to the present day. London: Phoenix.
  • Nancy, J.-L. 2000. Being singular plural. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
  • Pearson, M. 2006. “In comes I”: Performance, memory, and landscape. Exeter, UK: University of Exeter Press.
  • Perec, G. [1974] 2008. Species of spaces and other pieces. London: Penguin Classics.
  • Perec, G. [1975] 2010. An attempt at exhausting a place in Paris. New York: Wakefield Press.
  • Perec, G. 2014. Portrait of a man. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Perec, G. 2016. L’Attentat de Sarajevo [The Sarajevo Incident]. Paris: Seuil.
  • Phillips, R. 2016. George Perec’s experimental fieldwork; Perecquian fieldwork. Social and Cultural Geography. Advance online publication.
  • Riding, J. 2015a. Death drive: Final tracings. In Geographical aesthetics: Imagining space, staging encounters, ed. H. Hawkins and E. Straughan, 181–96. Farnham, UK: Ashgate.
  • Riding, J. 2015b. Landscape, memory, and the shifting regional geographies of northwest Bosnia-Herzegovina. GeoHumanities 1 (2): 378–97.
  • Riding, J. 2016a. A geographical biography of a nature writer. Cultural Geographies 23 (3): 387–99.
  • Riding, J. 2016b. Geographical testimony: A short history of a Yugoslav family. Journal of Cultural Geography. Advance online publication.
  • Riding, J. 2016c. A new regional geography of a revolution: Bosnia’s plenum movement. Territory, Politics, Governance. Advance online publication.
  • Riding, J. 2017. Representing a divided place: The artistic-military practice of Mladen Miljanović. Cultural Geographies 24 (1): 171–80.
  • Rieff, D. 1995. Slaughterhouse: Bosnia and the failure of the West. London: Vintage Random House.
  • Rose, M. 2006. Gathering “dreams of presence”: A project for the cultural landscape. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 24:537–54.
  • Rose, M. 2012. Dwelling as marking and claiming. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 30 (5): 757–71.
  • Sontag, S. 2004. Regarding the pain of others. London: Penguin.
  • Stoker, B. 1897. Dracula. Westminster, UK: Archibald Constable.
  • Taussig, M. 2006. Walter Benjamin’s grave. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Thompson, M. 1992. A paper house: The ending of Yugoslavia. London: Vintage.
  • Thrift, N. 2008. Non-representational theory: Space, politics, affect. London and New York: Routledge.
  • Till, K. 2005. The new Berlin: Memory, politics, place. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Till, K. 2010. Mapping spectral traces. In Mapping spectral traces, ed. K. Till, 1–4. Blacksburg: Virginia Tech College of Architecture and Urban Affairs.
  • Toal, G. 1996. An anti-geopolitical eye: Maggie O’Kane in Bosnia, 1992–93. Gender, Place and Culture 3 (2): 171–86.
  • Toal, G., and C. Dahlman. 2011. Bosnia remade: Ethnic cleansing and its reversal. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
  • Todorova, M. 1997. Imagining the Balkans. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
  • Wylie, J. 2002. An essay on ascending Glastonbury Tor. Geoforum 33:441–54.
  • Wylie, J. 2005. A single days walking: Narrating self and landscape on the South West Coast Path.Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 30:37–51.
  • Wylie, J. 2007. Landscape. London and New York: Routledge.
  • Wylie, J. 2009. Landscape, absence, and the geographies of love. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 34:275–89.
  • Žižek, S. 2000. The fragile absolute: Or why is the Christian legacy worth fighting for? London: Verso.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.