The second issue of the journal Antipolitika (we haven't seen #1, don't ask!) focuses on "socialist" Yugoslavia. A collaborative effort of about twenty comrades in the Balkans, Europe, and America, the texts in this issue approach "socialist" Yugoslavia from an angle that is usually not espoused by the mainstream left and right. Instead, they approach former Yugoslavia as a distinct period of capitalist development in the Balkans and as a statist project that brought with it all the power relations, tensions, expectations, and conformism that accompany every hierarchical and authoritarian organization of the human sphere.
The left usually points out that even if, from their point of view, Yugoslavia had its faults, it was succeeded by much worse “capitalist and nationalist states”. Therefore, from an anarchist point of view, it is important to acknowledge, not only that Yugoslavia was a class system of exploitation and domination, but also that this same system reproduced nationalistic ideologies.