Former Fellows

Home / Fellows / Former Fellows / Aleksandar Ignjatovic

Aleksandar Ignjatovic

Serbia

Dr A. Ignjatović graduated from the Faculty of Architecture, University of Belgrade, specialising in Aesthetics and Symbolism (1995 – 1996) and History and Theory of Art and Architecture (1994 – 1998), and took up postgraduate studies in Culture Studies – Material Culture as a Symbolic System (AAEN / Alternative Academic Educational Network, Belgrade, 1998-1999) and at Belgrade University (1999 – 2002). He received an MA and PhD degree in History of Art and Architecture at the University of Belgrade (2003, 2005). The title of his doctoral thesis was Construction of Yugoslav Identity in Architecture 1904 – 1941.

Dr Ignjatović has participated in numerous supplementary training and major research programmes, such as The Revitalisation Project for Cultural-Historical Entity of Topčider, Belgrade, organised and held by the Institute for the Protection of Monuments of the City of Belgrade (2004), The Comparative History Project of Central European University, Budapest (2007-2009).

Research Interests and Contribution to CAS ROH Project

In Serbia, questioning relations between modernity and historicity in the Humanities is still entrenched within imporous disciplinary boundaries. There is also an indicative lack of comparative studies – both as an approach concept and as a methodological strategy. Recently, however, younger scholars have been struggling to overcome these inert trends, especially in the field of historical studies. My own professional profile is very close to this small academic group, as throughout my academic career, I have been adopting and applying the interdisciplinary approach. My recent work, focusing on Yugoslavia, has been grounded on this conceptual platform by attempting to shed light on the complex ways, in which the national identity and local traditions were constructed and the ideology of Yugoslavism was imbued in the visual and architectural culture. It has been based on a self-reflective and conscious theoretical basis, embracing a variety of interpretative tools, and as such, it has been recognised as novel and outstanding within the Serbian academic milieu and has attracted the attention of international scholars.

I am convinced that my academic skills and qualifications will substantially contribute to the successful perspective to be developed within the CAS Project Regimes of Historicity and Discourses of Modernity and Identity, 1900-1945 in East Central, Southeastern and Northern Europe’.

 

Projects