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Abstract

This paper explores the formative experience of young pioneers in Yugoslavia and the ways their participation in state youth organizations provided the context for their transformation into punks in adolescence and beyond. The Union of Pioneers of Yugoslavia was specifically created by the state to create happy, utopian children with the intention of developing productive socialist adults later in life. Through initiation ceremonies, uniforms, and specifically designed spaces for young pioneers, the state sought to create a collective youth identity among Yugoslav children. Former pioneers rarely recall the socialist ideology taught, instead reminiscing on the joys of their childhood, whether that be the excitement of ceremonies or class fieldtrips. However, these utopian visions of socialism taught to and experienced by children as pioneers would lose their luster as they aged into the socioeconomic realities of the 1980s. It is in this important context that punk came bursting through the concrete, resulting in the creation of new spaces of thought, clothing, music, and artistic and political expression. From their lyrics to fashion to spaces of performance, Yugoslav punk allows for a different view on the seemingly universal youth experience of navigating dreams vocalized but not yet realized.

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