In this daring experiment in ethnographic place-writing cultural geographer James Riding aims
to get at the heart of post-conflict Bosnia showing the past alongside the present it created
via a series of journeys and through the retelling of memories. The juxtaposition between the
siege of Sarajevo and supersonic metal the refugee journey and the aid-worker travelling in
the other direction the desperation and fury to change the present yet being stuck with many
of the ethno-nationalist politicians and politics of the past-it is a journey to Bosnia as it
is understood today in popular discourse a war-torn place defined by ethnic conflict yet also
a journey to deconstruct and reveal more than ancient ethnic hatreds portrayed on television
screens across the globe from 1992 to 1995. Heavy with the weight of history on the one hand
and an inspirational place with radical emancipatory politics on the other it is only through
innovative storytelling that one can attempt to give a sense of what Bosnia itself is like in
words for those who have never been and-most importantly-for those who are from there.