Studio portrait of Natalija JoksimovićVisualizing Family, Gender Relations, and the Body. The Balkans approx. 1860-1950Ana DjordjeviceditorCentre for Southeast European History, University GrazCentre for Information Modelling in the Humanities, University Grazo:vase.1285Miloš JurišićMiloš JurišićNatalija 1897_0018WritingRecordsPublishingRecordsSpecial GarmentsClothingAdornmentBuilding and ConstructionDivision of Labor by GenderLaborLiving Standards and RoutinesPersonal NamesIndividuation and MobilityStatus, Role, and PrestigeIndividuation and MobilitySocial StratificationMarrigeLawLegal and Judicial PersonnelJusticeWarDeathEducationGender Roles and IssuesSerbiaBelgradeBelgrade20.46513,44.80401PhotographPhotographer1897 beforeMilanJovanovićJovanović, MilanHalf-length shot of a young woman standing behind a parapet, upon which she is resting her right hand. She is wearing a Victorian dress, gloves and a hat as well as holding a parasol is in her left hand. There is a dedication to her future husband on the verso.Natalija Joksimović (1880–1956) was the third-oldest daughter of Mileva and Nikola Joksimović from the town of Arandjelovac. In 1891 she moved to Belgrade, where she lived with her aunt and uncle and received a higher education ('Viša Ženska Škola', High School for Women, founded in 1863 to train teachers for the girls' schools). She became a teacher and at the age of 23 she married the engineer Jova Zrnić, with whom she had two daughters and four sons. She was widowed in 1918, after which she remarried. Her second husband was Đorđe (George) Matić, whom she also outlived. Her diary, titled "Natalija: Life in the Balkan Powder Keg, 1880–1956", has been published with an introductory study.Not specifiedCarte de visite12362SerbiaBelgradeIrvine, Jill A. Lilly, Carol S. (eds.): Natalija: Life in the Balkan Powder Keg, 1880–1956. Central European Univ. Press, 2009.