Introduction
Beyond Mosque, Church, and State: Alternative Narratives of the Nation in the Balkans
Theodora Dragostinova and Yana Hashamova (OSU)
I. Historical Dilemmas
1. Emergence and Historical Development of Muslim Communities in the Ottoman Balkans: Turcoman Colonization, Conversion to Islam, and the “Indigenization of Islam” in the Balkan Peninsula (late 14th – 18th centuries): Historiographical and Historical Remarks
Nikolay Antov (University of Arkansas)
2. From Exorcism to Historicism: Ottoman Historiography and the History of Nationalism in the Balkans
Ipek Yosmaoglu (Northwestern University)
3. Patriotic Publics: Rethinking Empire, Nationality, and the Popular Press in Ottoman and Habsburg Bosnia
Edin Hajdarpasic (Loyola University - Chicago)
4. In Search of the Bulgarians: Mapping the Nation through National Classifications
Theodora Dragostinova (OSU)
5. From Religious Community to Nation: The Official Recognition of a Bosnian Muslim Nation in Tito’s Yugoslavia
Brenna Miller (OSU)
6. Negotiating National and Cosmopolitan Impulses: Intellectuals and Cultural Politics in Zhivkov's Bulgaria
Irina Gigova (College of Charleston)
II. Contemporary Debates
7. E mos shikjoni kish e xhamija (And look not to church and mosque): How Albania and Macedonia Illuminate Bosnia and Bulgaria
Victor Friedman (University of Chicago)
8. Women between State and Mosque: Compliance or Agency?
Yana Hashamova (OSU)
9. Beyond Nation? A Thrice-Told Tale from Bulgaria’s Postsocialist Soundstage
Donna A. Buchanan (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign)
10. Who brought Ataka to the political scene? Analysis of the vote for Bulgaria’s radical nationalists
Maria Popova (McGill University)
11. Local governance in Bosnia: Addressing Ethno-nationally and Locally Defined Interests?
Paula M. Pickering (College of William and Mary)