Babić Marko: Đilasovci u Hrvatskoj - zaboravljeni disidenti

€ 18,00

Basic information

GLS Croatia
5€
Delivery
0€
Personal collection at the antique store
0€
GLS parcel machine
3€

Pay on pickup
CorvusPay
By general payment / Virman / Internet banking
Cash on delivery

Đilasovci u Hrvatskoj - zaboravljeni disidenti

Babić Marko

Summary

Marko Babić: Đilasovci in Croatia - forgotten dissidents

At the beginning of the 1950s, a group of intellectuals was active in the Republic of Croatia, advocating the idea of ​​"democratization" of political life, the fight against bureaucracy, a higher level of respect for the rule of law and more responsibility and transparency of party officials towards their voters. After the Tito-Stalin conflict, there was an attempt in Yugoslavia to legitimize the political and economic system, which was developing in the direction of "socialist democracy". From the very beginning, Yugoslavia presented itself as, nominally, a "people's democratic" state with socialist characteristics.

The activities of the "Đilasovs" in Croatia were made possible by the social atmosphere that ruled Yugoslavia after the Sixth Congress of the SKJ. Most of them were gathered around the Naprijed weekly, an organ of the SKJ, whose editorial office was joined by a younger generation of journalists in 1952. Over time, the paper became less and less dependent on the Central Committee, and in May 1953 it became an independent weekly. There were also "democratizing" tendencies in Vjesnik on Wednesday and Narodni list, given that they wrote about the harmfulness of bureaucracy and launched columns open to readers' comments. In addition to journalists, SKH Central Committee members such as Marijan Stilinović and Dušan Diminić advocated the continuation of "democratization" and the fight against bureaucracy.

SKJ Central Committee member Milovan Đilas was an extremely influential figure in that period, and in his articles in Borba and Nova Misla, he presented several positions that the "Đilasians" in Croatia, to a greater or lesser extent, also represented. First of all, he believed that SK should change its role in society and work towards becoming a factor that will direct the "people's masses" and not "command" them. Some Đilas residents in Croatia, such as Gušta Šprljan, went one step further and considered the option of liquidating SK, but the majority of Đila residents did not express such a view.

Additional information

  • Author: Babić Marko
  • Publisher: Despot Infinitus
  • Year of publication:2022
  • Place of publication:Zagreb
  • Pages:164
  • Dimensions:16x24 cm
  • Script:Latinica
  • Condition:Nova knjiga
  • Binding:Meki

You may also like

Recently viewed

Biblos Newsletter

For book lovers who enjoy finding the rare

New titles, special copies and quiet recommendations from the antiquarian bookshop.

Top