Ready for the homeland? Ritual, remembrance, and political extremism in Croatian football

In the case of Croatia, sport has proved to be a highly politicized form of national expression, functioning as a salient social field in which its “national habitus codes” are most intensively articulated, debated, and contested. An incident emblematizing this argument occurred on 19 November 2013, when the Croatian national football team secured their qualification for the 2014 Football World Cup in Brazil. In front of the 25,000 people at Zagreb's Maksimir stadium, the national team player, Josip Šimunić, grabbed the microphone and “greeted” all four stands with a loud chanting of Za dom (For the home(land)), to which the stands thunderously responded spremni (ready), the official salute of the Independent State of Croatia, a fascist WWII quisling-state. This paper argues that the issue extends beyond politically radicalized football hooligans and has to be understood from the standpoint of “social memory.” By focusing on football, the article scrutinizes debates in the Croatian public sphere dealing with the salute Za dom – spremni. Providing an insight into its complex and multi-layered nature, this paper illustrates that Croatian football has to be understood as a field in which social memory is prominently constructed, heatedly articulated, and powerfully disseminated.

[1]  Conflicting Memories, Competing Narratives and Contested Histories in Croatia’s Post-war Commemorative Practices , 2012 .

[2]  P. Connerton How societies remember: Contents , 1989 .

[3]  V. Turner,et al.  The Ritual Process. Structure and Anti-Structure , 1978 .

[4]  Marko Mustapić,et al.  FOOTBALL SUPPORTERS IN THE CONTEXT OF CROATIAN SOCIOLOGY: RESEARCH PERSPECTIVES 20 YEARS AFTER , 2013 .

[5]  P. Bourdieu Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste* , 2018, Food and Culture.

[6]  Croatia: Community, conflict and culture: The role of soccer clubs in migrant identity , 1998 .

[7]  Barbie Zelizer,et al.  Why memory's work on journalism does not reflect journalism's work on memory , 2008 .

[8]  A. Bairner,et al.  Transcending the borders of Irish identity? Narratives of northern nationalist footballers in Northern Ireland , 2011 .

[9]  John W. Slater,et al.  Sport Stars: The Cultural Politics of Sporting Celebrity , 2002 .

[10]  P. Connerton How Societies Remember , 1989 .

[11]  Vjeran Pavlaković Fulfilling the Thousand-Year-Old Dream: Strategies of Symbolic Nation-building in Croatia , 2015 .

[12]  Jeffrey K. Olick and,et al.  Social Memory Studies: From “Collective Memory” to the Historical Sociology of Mnemonic Practices , 1998 .

[13]  Tea Sindbæk ‘A Croatian champion with a Croatian name’: national identity and uses of history in Croatian football culture – the case of Dinamo Zagreb , 2013 .

[14]  T. Ashplant,et al.  The Politics of War Memory and Commemoration , 2000 .

[15]  Dario Brentin ‘A lofty battle for the nation’: the social roles of sport in Tudjman's Croatia , 2013 .

[16]  A. Bellamy The formation of Croatian national identity , 2018 .

[17]  Anna Madoglou,et al.  Greeks' and Germans' representations of world events: Selective memory and voluntary oblivion , 2010 .

[18]  Catherine Baker Popular Music and Political Change in Post-Tuđman Croatia: ‘It's All the Same, Only He's Not Here’? , 2010 .

[19]  Mladen M. Ostojić Collective Memory In Personal Accounts Of Veterans Of The Croatian War 1991-1995 , 2009 .

[20]  Trond E. Jacobsen,et al.  The Collective Memory , 1980 .

[21]  Kevin Dixon Learning the game: Football fandom culture and the origins of practice , 2013 .

[22]  Dubravko Dolić Die Fußballnationalmannschaft als „Trägerin nationaler Würde“? Zum Verhältnis von Fußball und nationaler Identität in Kroatien und Bosnien-Herzegowina , 2002 .

[23]  Sven Ismer Embodying the nation: football, emotions and the construction of collective identity , 2011, Nationalities Papers.

[24]  J. Maguire,et al.  EUROPEAN IDENTITY POLITICS IN EURO 96 , 1999 .

[25]  Catherine Baker Sounds of the Borderland: Popular Music, War and Nationalism in Croatia since 1991 , 2010 .

[26]  M. Young The Formation of Croatian National Identity: a Centuries‐old Dream? , 2005 .

[27]  A. Bairner The cultural politics of remembrance: sport, place and memory in Belfast and Berlin , 2008 .

[28]  Lisa Wade Banal Nationalism , 2011 .

[29]  J. Lembcke Voices of Collective Remembering , 2004 .

[30]  Rogers Brubaker,et al.  Nationalist Politics and Everyday Ethnicity in a Transylvanian Town , 2018 .

[31]  Norbert Elias,et al.  The Society of Individuals , 1993 .

[32]  M. Guschwan Stadium as public sphere , 2014 .

[33]  Marko Mustapić,et al.  Football, Politics and Cultural Memory: The Case of HNK Hajduk Split , 2014 .

[34]  C. Rommel Playing with difference: football as a performative space for division among Suryoye migrants in Sweden , 2011 .