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Articoli

No. 62 (2025)

Being Yugoslavian today: Unity and separateness in the emotional legacy of Yugoslavia through Jungian lenses

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3280/jun62-2025oa21708
Submitted
dicembre 16, 2025
Published
2026-02-18

Abstract

The dissolution of Yugoslavia was not only a geopolitical collapse but also a psychic drama, a struggle between archetypal forces of unity and fragmentation. This paper approaches the legacy of Yugoslavia as a symbolic container for projections of the Self, where the dream of wholeness coexisted with unintegrated shadows of grievance, shame, and trauma. Using Jungian concepts such as the Self, shadow, cultural complexes, and the transcendent function, this paper interprets Yugonostalgia and post-Yugoslav disorientation as emotional fields where memory, mourning, and identity intertwine. Recent memory studies and post-Jungian perspectives deepen this analysis, situating the Yugoslav case within broader debates on collective individuation, polycentric identity, and the dialectics of historical negation. The argument suggests that Yugoslavia’s psychic afterlife is best understood not as the failure of a national project but as an unfinished individuation: a demand to hold multiplicity without regression, to transform nostalgia into symbolic creativity. The Yugoslav legacy thus illuminates a wider human challenge – how to imagine wholeness without erasing difference, and how to live with plurality without collapse.

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