Glasnik Etnografskog instituta SANU 2017 Volume 65, Issue 1, Pages: 127-145
https://doi.org/10.2298/GEI1701127T
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Temporality and discontinuity as aspects of smallpox outbreak in Yugoslavia
Trifunović Vesna
(Institute of Ethnography SASA, Belgrade)
The paper demonstrates interconnection and role of certain social, political
and cultural factors in 1972 Yugoslavian smallpox outbreak. It focuses on a
cultural concept of time, denoted as temporal distance, and discontinuity
between pre-socialist and socialist period in Yugoslavian history, as
determinants that shaped the understanding of smallpox, risk perception and
behavior with regard to the disease. The argument is that those two factors
caused forgetting and disregarding of smallpox and thereby contributed to its
abrupt distribution in the beginning of the outbreak. In the end are
considered contemporary epidemiological implications of the reasoning that
relies on the cultural notions of temporal distance and discontinuity.
Keywords: culture, discontinuity, temporality, memory, smallpox, Yugoslavia
Project of the Serbian Ministry of Education, Science and Technological
Development, Grant no. 177026: Cultural heritage and identity