Skip to main content Skip to navigation

Recursive Lions and Strange Continuities of Bulgarian Nationalism

Recursive Lions and Strange Continuities of Bulgarian Nationalism

This article proposes the methodological and conceptual tool of ‘recursion’ as a means of understanding the production of historical continuity and discontinuity between different forms of nationalism in Bulgaria. The recent case of the demolition of the socialist-modernist monument ‘1300 Years of Bulgaria’ and its replacement with an earlier memorial from the authoritarian period of the 1930s forms the point of departure for this examination. Adopting a media and cultural studies perspective, the text focuses on the symbolic function of lions in both monuments and how they are engaged in the production of nationalist rhetoric and imagery. In line with Ann Laura Stoler’s (2016) proposition that the method of ‘recursive analytics’ can allow us to overcome the impasse formed by attempts to postulate either continuity or rupture between present and past, I first account for the histories of the erection of both monuments before proposing to read the ‘Bulgarian lions’, featuring in both of them, as recursive figures.

Link to paper: https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/european-review/article/recursive-lions-and-strange-continuities-of-bulgarian-nationalism/D6B935DE765B057304F23D9FB1703554