Andrej Mitrović | |
Birth Name: | Андреј Митровић |
Birth Date: | 17 April 1937 |
Birth Place: | Kragujevac, Kingdom of Yugoslavia |
Death Place: | Belgrade, Serbia |
Nationality: | Yugoslav, Serbian |
Spouse: | Ljubinka Trgovčević |
Discipline: | History |
Alma Mater: | (PhD) |
Thesis Title: | Yugoslavia at the Paris Peace Conference 1919-1920 |
Thesis Year: | 1967 |
Andrej Mitrović (Serbian: Андреј Митровић; 17 April 1937 – 25 August 2013) was a Serbian historian, professor and author. A specialist of the contemporary history of Serbia and Yugoslavia, he was head of the Contemporary History Department at the Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade. Mitrović wrote extensively about the First World War, the Paris Peace Conference, interwar Europe as well as articles on economic, social, cultural history and historiography.
One of the leading Yugoslav and Serbian historians of the 20th century, Mitrović often challenged his own country's historical narratives and was openly critical of Serbian nationalism in the late 1980s and early 1990. He was an honorary member of the Serbian Academy of Science and Arts, a member of the Montenegrin Academy of Sciences and Arts, and the recipient of several prestigious awards.[1]
Andrej Mitrović was born in Kragujevac, Kingdom of Yugoslavia on 17 April 1937, he completed elementary and secondary school in Kragujevac. Mitrović graduated in history from the Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade, earning his master's degree in 1964 with the thesis "April negotiations on the Adriatic question at the 1919 peace conference" and his doctorate in 1967 with the thesis "Delegation of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes at the 1919-1920 Peace Conference".[2]
Mitrović became faculty assistant in 1961, assistant professor in 1967, associate professor in 1974; that year he published Times Intolerant: A Political History of the Great Powers, 1919-1939 his award-winning book about the interwar growing ideological divisions and the intolerance that resulted from it.
In 1980 he accepted a position at the Faculty of Philosophy in Belgrade, where he taught contemporary European history, introduction to historical studies and numerous specialised courses; in 1987 he became the head of the department of Modern History. In 1988 he became a corresponding fellow of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, spending research years in Italy and West Germany.[3] Mitrović published the first comprehensive theory of historical studies in Serbian historiography after assimilating the concept of total history developed by the Bielefeld School, Mitrović’s version included politics, economy, society and culture bringing new perspectives in historical writing, a concept which his students then started applying in their own research.[4]
Mitrović studied the place of Yugoslavia in European politics between the two world wars and is the author of books and articles about Serbia’s involvement in the First World War, as well as on the economic, social, and cultural, history of the Balkans within the European framework. According to Cambridge University Press Mitrović's Serbia's Great War, 1914–1918 (2005), his only volume to be republished in English, is widely regarded as a major contribution to the topic of Serbia and its role in WWI and is being studied in western scholarship. The first edition was greeted in scholarly circles as a "scrupulously written magnum opus".[5]
Starting in the late 1980s Mitrović was outspoken about the abuse of history and the revision of facts for political purposes, using his scholarship as a platform for critique and activism; In the 1990s he was a vocal critic of the regime of Slobodan Milošević, opposing growing nationalism and advocating for a modern European oriented Serbia. Some of his speeches were published by the Belgrade Circle in a book entitled (Other Serbia). Together with his wife, Ljubinka Trgovčević, he utilised his academic background to engage in public discourse, writing essays, giving lectures, and participating in every protests against the war.[6]
In 1991 they published an historian's proclamation against the shelling of Dubrovnik, that same year he published a book in which he warned against the effects of what he called parahistory, a type of historical revisionism featuring the distortion of selected sources to indict one side or another.[7] In April 1999 with a number of prominent Serbian intellectual, he was a signatory of “A plea for peace from Belgrade”.[8] According to German Historian Alexander Korb, as a consequence of his positions that stood out from most Serbian professional and academic circles, Mitrović was never promoted to full member of the Serbian Academy.[9]
Andrej Mitrović was married to fellow historian Ljubinka Trgovčević. He died on 25 August 2013 in Belgrade.
During his lifetime Mitrović published 25 books and approximately 400 articles.[11]