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Carol Lilly, "Death and Burial in Socialist Yugoslavia: The Politicization of Cemeteries and Ethnic Conflict in the Balkans" (Bloomsbury, 2024).

Nov 21, 2025
Carol Lilly, a historian and author, explores the intricate dynamics of cemetery culture in the Balkans, particularly during and after the Yugoslav conflict. She highlights how burial sites became politicized and weaponized in nationalist movements, further entrenching ethnic divisions. Lilly shares her personal experiences with Yugoslav burial traditions and contrasts religious customs across communities. She reveals the impact of communist policies on grave markers, illustrating how these spaces transformed into battlegrounds for ideological expression and conflict.
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ANECDOTE

First Cemetery Visit That Changed Her View

  • Carol Lilly describes her first meaningful cemetery visit during the Day of the Dead in Yugoslavia and contrasts it with her American experience.
  • The visit showed her how personal grave markers and family rituals animate memory in ways she had not seen before.
INSIGHT

Cemeteries Are Political Communities

  • Cemeteries function as communities of the dead that mirror inclusion and exclusion in living communities.
  • That dual nature makes cemeteries vulnerable to politicization and deliberate desecration in conflict.
INSIGHT

Partisan Parks Versus Segregated Civilian Graves

  • Yugoslav communists created integrated partisan cemeteries but left civilian cemeteries ethno-religiously segregated.
  • This inconsistency helped make civilian burial sites targets during the 1990s ethnic conflicts.
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