Steerforth Press
Once Upon a Yugoslavia: When the American Way Met Tito's Third Way
Once Upon a Yugoslavia: When the American Way Met Tito's Third Way
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It is 1968. Across America, citizens march for social reform and an end to the Vietnam War. Amid all this, Surya Greena New York-born, self-absorbed, modern young womanis a student at Stanford University, blithely pursuing a graduate degree in communication. Her view of life's purpose unexpectedly starts to expand when she says "Yes" when her Stanford film mentor selects her for a writing job at Zagreb Film in Yugoslavia. Family and friends marvel at her courage, or foolishness. The Zagreb studio may be the renowned producer of the first non-American animated film to win an Oscar, but it is in a country most Americans fear and reject as "communist."
Green has no idea that her stay in Yugoslavia will ultimately take her beyond national borders to the outermost limits of her mind.
Although penned in the first person against the backdrop of Tito's Yugoslavia in historic 1968, Once Upon a Yugoslavia is, paradoxically, most timely. The global economic crisis has compelled people to question excessive consumption and redefine success and the good life while embracing new lifestyle prioritiesjust as Yugoslavia required of Surya Green decades ago. Once Upon a Yugoslavia addresses this present-day longing while also offering a lively history lesson.
History books have objectively described the former Yugoslavia, but Once Upon a Yugoslavia gives personalized look at the everyday lives of people in pre-1989 Eastern Europe that shows how the experience transformed one young woman's American Dream. Chronicling the sights, sounds, and ups and downs of the everyday Yugoslav existence, Green speaks to both the positive and negative aspects of the contemporary phenomenon known as "Yugo-nostalgia." The pros and cons of the American and Yugoslav societies fly to and fro during Surya's conversations with a host of colorful characterssome of whom she lodges with and travels the countryside with, others of whom she dates. In this strange Big Brotherish country of perplexing language, culture, and customswhich gives Surya an early experience of living a monitored life without privacy in a land where paranoia is contagiousmore than once readers will hear her sobbing at night.
Ultimately, the Yugoslav social experimentits plus points, at leastwere to give Surya Green a considerably altered view of the American values with which she was raised. And it is what led to that perspectivea personal transformation that started for her in explosive, memorable, life-changing 1968 in Tito's Yugoslavia, and continues to this daywhich makes Once Upon a Yugoslavia such a unique and remarkable book.
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