REBELLION IN GAVRILA PRINCIPA STREET IN BELGRADE
Text topic: cultures of resistance
Text author: Татјана Росић
The paper examines (anti) hegemony as a strategic necessity of
contemporary culture of resistance, embodied in the complex social and
political context of globalization and its consequences, with particular
reference to the strategies of contemporary culture of resistance in
contemporary Serbia. The focus is on a comparative analysis that
includes the graffiti Gavrilo Princip (2013) by an anonymous artist /
art group BUNT, found in Gavrila Principa Street in Belgrade and the
video spot for the song titled “Bunt” (2007) by the band Disciplin A
Kitchme, related to the last handmade candy shop in Belgrade with the
address in the same street. The two selected examples are created in a
different subcultural contexts of Serbia today, with different ideological
signatures and artistic connotations: while the graffiti Gavrilo Princip
could be associated with infra-political traditions of those subcultures
in which the narrative about the Serbian national struggle is diligently
nurtured, the video spot “Bunt” by Disciplin A Kitchme is located in
the anti-imperialistic and anti-consumeristic tradition of rock-n-roll
rebellion, with a particular focus on Serbian society and its political
pathologies, including the unusually strong fostering of a nationalist
political discourse. Selected art works, however, are both characterized
by the controversial status of the political, historical and cultural
Yugoslav legacy, which is re-examined by and through them. The
works analyzed – precisely due to the complexity with which they
deliberately refer to the Yugoslav heritage – are recognized as places of
subversive and polyvalent resistance to the dominant discourses within
the public speech arena of contemporary Serbian society. Thus, Gavrila
Principa Street reveals contemporary Serbian culture of resistance as
a hub/node of ideologically and culturally opposed discourses that are
mutually invoked and disputed, producing the strategically needed
“noise” indispensable in the process of interfering and transcoding of
the hegemonic social and cultural codes.