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A Would-Be Yugoslavia:

German

"Verfall und Glanz des Nationalismus." Nationalismus - Identität - Europäertum. Gyula Kurucz (Hrsg.) edition q Verlags-GmbH, Berlin, 1994.

English:

"For Yugoslavia, Breakup is the Best Answer." New York Times. 2 March 1991.

"The Terminal Illness of Yugoslavia." Chicago Tribune. 9 June 1990.

"Yugoslavia's Gulag." The Sacramento Bee. April 1984.

"Naive Policy." The Sacramento Bee. 22 October 1984.

"The Yugoslav Mythology." Chronicles of American Culture. August 1993.

"Yugo into History." The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. July 17, 1991.

"Croatia's Role in Bosnia-Herzegovina." The Christian Science Monitor. July 27, 1992

"Yugoslavia: The End of Communism, the Return of Nationalism." America. April 20, 1991.

"The Missing Links in Yugoslavia's Tragedy." The Washington Times. August 16, 1994.

"Croatian Coin Reborn." The New York Times. Friday, June 10, 1994.

"Yugoslav Solution: Ethnic Questions Should Come First." Wall Street Journal. August 26-27, 1988.

"Yugoslavia's Self-Management is a Model of Socialist Failure." New York City Tribune. October 25, 1984.

 

 

 

Postmortem Report: Cultural Examinations from Postmodernity

Tomislav Sunic is one of the leading scholars and exponents of the European New Right. A prolific writer and accomplished linguist in Croatian, English, French, and German, his thought synthesizes the ideas of Oswald Spengler, Carl Schmitt, Vilfredo Pareto, and Alain de Benoist, among others, exhibiting an elitist, neo-pagan, traditionalist sensibility. A number of themes have emerged in his cultural criticism: religion, cultural pessimism, race and the Third Reich, liberalism and democracy, and multiculturalism and communism. This book collects Dr. Sunics best essays of the past decade, treating topics that relate to these themes. From the vantage point of a European observer who has experienced the pathology of liberalism and communism on both sides of the Iron Curtain, Dr. Sunic offers incisive insights into Western and post-communist societies and culture. Always erudite and at times humorous, this highly readable postmortem report on the death of the West offers a refreshing, alternative perspective to what is usually found in the cavaderous Freudo-Marxian scholasticism that rots in the dank catacombs of postmodern academia.