France Mihelič, Ožgana tepka/Scorched pear tree, 1944, črna kreda/ black chalk, 38 cm x 27,5 cm, RI-11964.

France Mihelič, Ožgana tepka/Scorched pear tree, 1944, črna kreda/ black chalk, 38 cm x 27,5 cm, RI-11964.

Essays Partisan ecology in Yugoslav liberation and antifascist art

Partisan and decolonial ecology is a notion addressed by Andreas Malm and Malcom Ferdinand respectively, in their texts on the Caribbean maroon partisans – the emancipated slaves – who moved to the more mountainous parts of the islands that were still covered by dense vegetation. This concept is here taken to another historical context, that of Yugoslav partisans’ fight against the fascist occupation in the Second World War. I engage in reading an array of partisan artworks that point to fascist domination/war over nature juxtaposed to emerging solidarity among humans and animals/nature. From poems and short stories to drawings and graphic art material, the subject matter of forest as a site of resistance and political subjectivity emerges. Diverse animals, pack of wolves, birds that continue to sing despite the thorny branches, the figure of the snail as the affect and attitude of resilience – these become “comrades” in the struggle, mobilizing nature in their fight against fascism.

Published in the printed edition of Baltic Worlds BW 2023:4, p 47-53
Published on balticworlds.com on December 11, 2023

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abstract

Partisan and decolonial ecology is a notion addressed by Andreas Malm and Malcom Ferdinand respectively, in their texts on the Caribbean maroon partisans – the emancipated slaves – who moved to the more mountainous parts of the islands that were still covered by dense vegetation. This concept is here taken to another historical context, that of Yugoslav partisans’ fight against the fascist occupation in the Second World War. I engage in reading an array of partisan artworks that point to fascist domination/war over nature juxtaposed to emerging solidarity among humans and animals/nature. From poems and short stories to drawings and graphic art material, the subject matter of forest as a site of resistance and political subjectivity emerges. Diverse animals, pack of wolves, birds that continue to sing despite the thorny branches, the figure of the snail as the affect and attitude of resilience – these become “comrades” in the struggle, mobilizing nature in their fight against fascism.

Keywords: Partisan ecology, antifascism of non-human world, partisan aesthetics, becoming, “human animal”, poems, graphic art, figure of resistance.   

Read the full article as pdf (download above).

The article is part of a theme in the printed journal 2023:4, “Monuments, new arts and news narratives” with guest editor Cecilia Sjöholm>>.

  • by Gal Kirn

    Assistant Professor and Research Associate at the department of sociology, Faculty of Arts, University of Ljubljana, and affiliated with Södertörn University, and part of the international research group Partisan Resistances, University of Grenoble. Research focuses: art, politics and memory in the period of the national liberation struggle and socialist Yugoslavia.

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