In the first essay, Ana Dević reviews several studies pertaining to the social, economic, and cultural dimensions of the Yugoslav crisis. Following the introduction, the edited volume contains nine contributions that cover a rather broad selection of Yugoslav topics, mainly touching upon Croatian and Serbian contexts while underrepresenting topics related to other republics, especially Macedonia, Montenegro, and Bosnia and Herzegovina. According to the editors, the publication has two aims: first, to explore the role of class in presumably classless and socialist Yugoslavia and second, to examine the role of class in the process of Yugoslavia's dissolution, which has been assumed to mainly be grounded in ethno-nationalist factors. “We seek to ‘bring class back in’ to (post-) Yugoslav historiography …” (2), state Rory Archer, Igor Duda, and Paul Stubbs in the introduction to the edited volume entitled Social Inequalities and Discontent in Yugoslav Socialism.
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