Created after World War I ''Yugoslavia'' was a combination of ethnically religiously and linguistically diverse but connected South Slav peoples - Slovenes Croats and Serbs but also Bosnian Muslims Macedonians and Montenegrins - in addition to non-Slav minorities. The Great Powers and the country''s intellectual and political elites believed that a coherent identity could be formed in which the different South Slav groups in the state could identify with a single Balkan Yugoslav identity. Pieter Troch draws on previously unpublished sources from the domain of education to show how the state''s nationalities policy initially allowed for a flexible and inclusive Yugoslav nationhood and how that system was slowly replaced with a more domineering and rigid ''top-down'' nationalism during the dictatorship of King Alexander I - who banned political parties and coded a strongly politicised Yugoslav national identity. As Yugoslav society became increasingly split between the ''pro-Yugoslav'' central regime and ''anti-Yugoslav'' opposition the seeds were sown for the failure of the Yugoslav idea. Nationalism and Yugoslavia provides a valuable new insight into the complexities of pre-war Yugoslavia.
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