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Postsocialism, Social Value, and Identity Politics among Albanians in Macedonia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 January 2017

Vasiliki P. Neofotistos*
Affiliation:
State University of New York Buffalo

Abstract

In this article, Vasiliki P. Neofotistos analyzes the reappropriation of the term Šiptar, a derogatory Macedonian term for Albanians, by male members of the Albanian community in the Republic of Macedonia. Neofotistos shows how the reappropriation of the ethnic slur reflects constellations of social value, that is to say, larger systems of meaning and action concerning who and what is valued in life, that have emerged with Macedonian independence. Albanian men tap into familiar divisions found in the larger Macedonian society and create meaningful forms of collectivity as they deal with rapid social, economic, and political change in the context of Macedonia's postsocialist transformation of social practices and ideals. This case study of Macedonia sheds light on the dynamics of social relations within socially marginalized groups.

Type
Challenging Crossroads: Macedonia in Global Perspective
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies. 2010

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References

This article is based on research funded by a Fellowship for East European Studies from the American Council of Learned Societies and a grant from the International Research and Exchanges Board (1REX) with funds provided by the National Endowment for the Humanities, the United States Department of State, which administers the Title VIII Program, and the IREX Scholarship Fund. Warm thanks go to Keith Brown, Susan L. Woodward, and especially Victor A. Friedman who read multiple drafts with unflagging enthusiasm and unstinting generosity and provided wonderful comments and extremely helpful suggestions for revision. The article has also benefited greatly from the feedback of four anonymous reviewers. None of the above-mentioned organizations and individuals is responsible for the views expressed.

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20. I am grateful to Victor A. Friedman for this comment.

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22. See Friedman “Albania,” 3:1878.

23. I am grateful to Susan L. Woodward for bringing to my attention that the republican, not the federal, government undertook these efforts. I am also grateful to an anonymous reviewer who clarified the pre-1969 status of the university in Prishtina.

24. As Robert Hayden notes, even though the right to secession was included in the introduction to the federal constitution, the operative text mentioned that the consent of all republics was needed for the external boundaries of Yugoslavia to change. The Constitutional Court of Yugoslavia therefore did not judge unilateral decisions to secede favorably. See Hayden, Robert M., Blueprints for a House Divided: The Constitutional Logic of the Yugoslav Conflicts (Ann Arbor, 1999), 4546 CrossRefGoogle Scholar, 183.

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26. See Kennedy, Randall, Nigger: The Strange Career of a Troublesome Word (New York, 2002)Google Scholar. Also see Spears, Arthur K., “African American Language Use: Ideology and Socalled Obscenity,” in Mufwene, Salikoko S., Rickford, John R., Bailey, Guy, and Baugh, John, eds., African-American English: Structure, History, and Use (London, 1998), 226–50.Google Scholar

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28. The most significant amendments included the following: in areas where at least 20 percent of the population spoke a language other than Macedonian, that language became official—this measure meant that in many predominantly Albanian-populated municipalities Albanian became an official language; state funds were provided for university-level education in the Albanian language; and the percentage of Albanians in government and civil service positions, such as the police and the army, was increased.

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37. See also Chock, Phyllis Pease, “The Irony of Stereotypes: Toward an Anthropology of Ethnicity,” Cultural Anthropology 2, no. 3 (August 1987): 347–68CrossRefGoogle Scholar. The ungrammatical use of the definite article on the vocative Siptaritewhen used by Albanian men is explicable as a reference to the use of the definite form in graffiti and shouted slogans, which are used by ethnic Macedonians against Albanians, such as Smrl na Siptarite, “Death to the Albanians,“ and Uu-aa Siptarite, “Boo [to] the Albanians.” Victor A. Friedman, e-mail communication, 25 September 2008.

38. The influx after the earthquake was not limited to Albanians and urban-rural tensions during that period were not ethnicized.

39. See Neofotistos, Vasiliki P., “Beyond Stereotypes: Violence and the Porousness of Ethnic Boundaries in the Republic of Macedonia,” History and Anthropology 15, no. 1 (March 2004): 4767 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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42. Also see Abu-Lughod, Lila, “The Romance of Resistance: Tracing Transformations of Power through Bedouin Women,” American Ethnologist 17, no. 1 (February 1990): 4155 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Willis, Paul E., Learning to Labor: How Working Class Kids Get Working Class Jobs (New York, 1977)Google Scholar; Warren, Kay B., ed., The Violence Within: Cultural and Political Opposition in Divided Nations (Boulder, Colo., 1993)Google Scholar.

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48. Victor A. Friedman, e-mail communication, 21 April 2008.

49. Also see Thiessen, Waiting for Macedonia.

50. Shortages of certain goods were not too uncommon in Yugoslavia, especially in the south (Kosovo and Macedonia). In the 1970s, for example, people in Macedonia often traveled toThessaloniki in northern Greece to purchase western goods that were not available in Yugoslavia, or at least in the south. Drawing on their consumer experiences during socialism, specifically the chronic shortages of the well-known detergent Faks, Albanians in Skopje use the expression “Je hyp si Faksi” (You have disappeared like [the detergent] Faks) when they have not seen someone in a long time. Shortages in Yugoslavia were not as severe, long-lasting, or widespread as in the rest of eastern Europe and in the USSR and, moreover, their root causes were fundamentally different. The Yugoslav shortages were due to inequalities in distribution and, in the 1980s, to the drastic cut in imports required by Yugoslavia's acceptance of conditions imposed by the International Monetary Fund. On the shortages in the command economies of the eastern bloc, which were a different phenomenon, see Kornai, Janos, Economics of Shortage (New York, 1980)Google Scholar; Verdery, Katherine, What Was Socialism and What Comes Next? (Princeton, 1996)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. I am grateful to Victor A. Friedman and Susan L. Woodward for the information included in this footnote.

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55. Cf. Herzfeld, Michael, “Silence, Submission, and Subversion: Toward a Poetics of Womanhood,” in Loizos, Peter and Papataxiarchis, Evthymios, eds., Contested Identities: Gender and Kinship in Modern Greece (Princeton, 1991), 7997 Google Scholar.

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