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Rebecca west yugoslavia
Rebecca west yugoslavia








rebecca west yugoslavia rebecca west yugoslavia

(In modern spelling, one "s" for Kosovo is preferred, rather than West's "Kossovo".) In the epilogue (written in 1941, two years after the outbreak of World War II) she praised Yugoslavia for refusing to capitulate to Nazi Germany. She repeatedly refers to the devastation that followed the famous battle of Kossovo in 1389, in which the Serbs were defeated by the Turks, and which led to five hundred years of Turkish rule. In her travels, West became an admirer of the Serbs and their culture, often contrasting it favorably with the West. Her aim in writing Black Lamb and Grey Falcon was to show the Balkan past alongside the present it created. Since the war had affected West's own life-as it had all members of West's generation-she wanted to understand how and why it happened.

rebecca west yugoslavia

West admits that before she visited the region, she knew almost nothing about it, other than that events in the Balkans (notably the assassination of Austria's Archduke Franz Ferdinand in 1914) had led to World War I. It is also a vivid account of the violent history of the Balkans going back many hundreds of years. This immensely long book, which runs to 1150 pages, is much more than a travelogue, however. Black Lamb and Grey Falcon: A Journey through Yugoslavia is a record of her travels. Black Lamb and Grey Falcon: A Journey through Yugoslaviaįrom 1936 to 1938, journalist and novelist Rebecca West made three trips to Yugoslavia.










Rebecca west yugoslavia