Dragan Markovina

Dragan Markovina
Born (1981-02-06) 6 February 1981
Mostar, FPR Yugoslavia (now: Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Residence Split, Croatia
Nationality Croat
Education MSc, Dr.Sc. (Zagreb)
Alma mater University of Zagreb
Occupation Historian, writer

Dragan Markovina (born 6 February 1981) is a Croatian historian, author and political activist.

Early years and education

Markovina was born in Mostar and there he attended the first 5 grades of Primary school. In 1992, due to the Bosnian War, he moved to the island of Korčula in Croatia where he continued primary school. He continued to live there after the war. In 1999, Markovina graduated from the Gymnasium in Korčula. After that he went to study history at the Faculty of Philosophy in Zagreb. He graduated from the faculty in 2004. His graduation thesis was: ZAVNOH-Foundations and political activity.

In December 2004, he started working at the University of Split and later he enrolled in the postgraduate studies of Croatian history at the Philosophy faculty in Zagreb. He defended his master's thesis in 2009 on the subject: The Šibenik port in the commercial-cultural exchanges between the two Adriatic coasts in the 18th and 19th century. In 2011, Markovina defended his doctor's thesis on the subject: Dalmatia in the Venice reform projects during the 18th century.[1]

Political activism

When it comes to politics, he is regarded as a left-wing intellectual. He gained public attention in April 2013 when he started a petition for the removal of Franjo Tuđman's statue in Split. He later announced his candidacy for the council assembly at the Split local elections, 2013. He received 1.97% of the popular vote.[2]

In December 2014, he was a guest on the national TV talk show, Nedjeljom u 2,[3] which is the most popular TV talk show in Croatia and it pushed Markovina into mainstream media. About the same time, he was informed that his contract with the University of Split was not going to be renewed so he lost his job as a university professor.[4] He was later offered a job by Milorad Pupovac to work with the archives at the Serb National Council which he accepted and then left after a few months.[5]

Markovina is known for his opposition to the modern Croatian politics which to him originates from the 1990s. He is a fierce critic of the Franjo Tuđman regime and his modern legacy. He calls for a public recognition of the Croatian war crimes against Serbs in the Croatian War of Independence and possibly his most devoted field of engagement is the defense of the Yugoslav anti-fascist movement in World War II which is marginalised and ignored by the modern Croatia government. He also supports the separation of church and state in Croatia.

He is politically engaged in his hometown of Mostar in Bosnia and Herzegovina. He criticizes the Croatian administration in Mostar for dividing the city into 2 parts and for creating a nationalistic rhetoric which promotes hate between Croats and Bosniaks. He also supports the idea that the football club FK Velež Mostar should return to their original stadium. Their original stadium was stolen by the Croatian administration in 1992 and given to the football club HŠK Zrinjski Mostar.[6]

Markovina is a very active writer. His first book from 2014, Between red and black is one of the first historical books in Croatia which focuses on the effects and disasters that the Croatian right wing government did in Split and Mostar during the 1990s. His third book, History of the defeated is focused on the devastation of Yugoslavian legacy in Croatia.

When it comes to his opinion on political party's in Croatia, he is a strong critic of both HDZ and SDP. For Markovina, HDZ is a right wing nationalistic party which promotes hate and SDP for him is a party that betrayed social democracy.

As a teenager, Markovina was a sympathizer and friend of Stipe Šuvar and his Socialist Labour Party of Croatia in the late 1990s and early 2000s. In 2014, he said on a TV talk show that he is not a member of any party but he believes that the far-left party called Workers' Front has a perspective and that he wishes them all the best. In 2016, he began setting up his own left-wing party.[5]

Markovina is a collumnist for the national weekly newspaper Telegram.

Selected publications

See also List of publications by Dragan Markovina

References

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