Bosnian St. Louis
$19.95
Title | Range | Discount |
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Trade Discount | 5 + | 25% |
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Description
Bosnian St. Louis is a warm and richly illustrated tribute to an unlikely immigrant success story in America’s heartland.
In the 1990s, Bosnia and Herzegovina was rocked by brutal warfare and systematic genocide, leading to a mass exodus from the Balkan nation. Starting in 1993, thousands of these displaced Bosnians found a welcoming new home in an unexpected place: St. Louis, Missouri, where today the Bosnian population exceeds 60,000. Bosnian St. Louis tells the story of how these resettled immigrants took root in a new home and quickly reshaped the image of their adopted city.
Using first-hand accounts from members of St. Louis’s Bosnian community, Patrick McCarthy and Akif Cogo explore how an event of global significance became the lived reality of the refugees who came to St. Louis and who, in the ensuing years, have had a profound effect on the character of the city they now call home. The city’s resettled Bosnians quickly established themselves as a positive local presence, bringing with them tight-knit families, a strong work ethic, and a rich cultural heritage. Tragedy and sorrow created the Bosnian community in St. Louis, but, as this book makes clear, new beginnings and opportunities are building a brighter future for the city’s Bosnians and for all those who call them neighbors and friends.
Illustrated with nearly one hundred images and featuring an introduction from acclaimed writer and Bosnian immigrant Aleksandar Hemon, Bosnian St. Louis is a groundbreaking account of a vast refugee resettlement in a single US city and a testament to how that resettlement has changed that city forever. Patrick McCarthy is associate dean of libraries at Saint Louis University, where he directs the Medical Center Library. He is the author of After the Fall: Srebrenica Survivors in St. Louis, also published by the Missouri Historical Society Press. Akif Cogo is the historian and archivist for St. Louis Bosnians Inc., a nonprofit organization he founded in 2011.
Author Preface
Historical Background
Chapter 1 – Early Arrivals
Chapter 2 –Yugoslavia Before and After Tito
Chapter 3 – Out of the Inferno
Chapter 4 – St. Louis Responds to War and Genocide in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Chapter 5 – Sarajevo’s Last Child
Chapter 6 – Bosnians Helping Their Own
Chapter 7 – The Community Organizes
Chapter 8 – The Community Settles
Chapter 9 – The Community Mourns
Chapter 10 – The Community Flexes Its Political Muscle
Chapter 11 – The Community Prospers
Chapter 12 – The Community Establishes Religious Roots
Chapter 13 – Remembering Srebrenica
Chapter 14 – Prijedor: Lives from the Bosnian Genocide
Chapter 15 – Coming of Age in a Time of War
Chapter 16 – The Era of the Refugee
Chapter 17 – Recollecting the Past: The Bosnia Memory Project
Afterword – Hariz Halilovich
Timeline
Acknowledgments
Index of Names
Additional information
Dimensions | 1 × 6 × 9 in |
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