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In this book talk, Vjosa Musliu will present her book Girlhood At War, a collection of 32 short stories about war, non-war and liberal peacebuilding. The book is an epistemic intervention in academic fields that have traditionally been avoidant to the personal and the first pronoun in theorising about war and peace. At the same time, it is an intervention in a field in which, traditionally, non-Western knowledges and non-Western epistemic subjects have been historically disregarded as particularistic and not-objective.
Event details of Girlhood at War: Interpreting War and Liberation in Kosovo
Date
2 February 2026
Time
15:30 -17:00
Room
B5.12

The book tells the true story of a young girl growing up during the Kosovo war and its immediate aftermath following Kosovo's liberation by NATO troops in 1999. Through her embodied experiences, the book exposes the tangible and everyday acts and events of the war, providing brutal insight into the impact of war and the politics of subjugation. 

At the outset of the book (in 1998), Vjosa's view of the world, as a young child, is organized in clear dichotomies: the good Albanians and the evil Serbs; the brutal Serbian military shelling Albanian civilians and the angelic NATO airplanes bombing Serbian military sites. This Manichean worldview starts to unravel after Vjosa and her family are chased away from their home by the Serbian military and moved to the suburbs. There, surrounded by mostly poor and uneducated fellow Albanians, she gradually discovers the layers of her family's socio-economic privileges. 

When the war ends in 1999, Vjosa believes she has received her own 'happily ever after'. She celebrates her thirteenth birthday happily wearing a US military uniform, holding an unbearably heavy unloaded gun as she becomes the favorite interpreter of the American NATO troops. She spends several months after the war occasionally translating between angry Albanians who now seek revenge against Serbs and NATO troops who insist on not picking sides; showcasing the impossibility of (re)building Kosovo with “both-sides-ism” becoming the modus operandi of the international intervening structures. 

About the speaker

Vjosa Musliu is Associate Professor of International Relations at Free University of Brussels, Belgium. Her research focuses on international and European interventions and statebuilding. Her area of focus is primarily the Balkans and post-Soviet space. She is a co-founder of Yugoslawomen+ Collective, a collective of six academics from the post-Yugoslav space working in ‘Global North’ academia. She is the author of three books and dozens of journal articles in the field of international relations.

Roeterseilandcampus - building B/C/D (entrance B/C)

Room B5.12
Nieuwe Achtergracht 166
1018 WV Amsterdam