Results 21 to 30 of about 3,846 (283)

The history of the research on Romani (Gypsy) music and musicians in Bulgaria [PDF]

open access: yesMuzikologija
In this article, we examine the historiography of research on Romani (Gypsy) music and musicians in Bulgaria, presenting the studies and researchers who have focused on this field. We aim to provide a chronological and thematic overview of the available publications, together with an analysis of the key characteristics of each historical ...
Lozanka Peycheva, Ventsislav Dimov
openaire   +2 more sources

Invisible Strangers, or Romani History Reconsidered

open access: yesHistory of the Present, 2020
AbstractThis essay proposes that the invisibility of so-called Gypsies in Middle Eastern and Central Asian historiography derives from two linked phenomena. First, the work of nineteenth- and twentieth-century European and North American philologists, medievalists, and ethnographers delegitimized the languages of the “Strangers,” along with the ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Representations of Epistemological Colonization

open access: yesInternational Journal of Roma Studies, 2022
It can be argued that apart from critically applying the theoretical framework of Postcolonial Studies to Romani Studies, we can effectively describe the position and the history of the European Roma by applying some of the insights of Indigenous Studies.
Teri Szűcs
doaj   +1 more source

CONSIDERATIONS REGARDING THE STRATIGRAPHY OF THE FORTRESS OF HÂRȘOVA IN LIGHT OF THE NEW RESEARCH

open access: yesAnnals: Series on History and Archaeology (Academy of Romanian Scientists)
After an introduction, in which the construction phases of the fortifications of the Hârșova fortress, a few landmarks regarding the archaeological research of the site, and the context that led to the undertaking of new large-scale archaeological ...
Cristina PARASCHIV-TALMAȚCHI
doaj   +1 more source

Where are the Romanies? An Absent Presence in Narratives of Britishness

open access: yes, 2015
The article explores the exclusion or ghettoization of British Romani experience in narratives of historical Britishness, an action that resounds in contemporary politics and identities.
Matthews, Jodie
core   +1 more source

The role of the Vlax Roma in shaping the European Romani maternal genetic history

open access: yesAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 2011
AbstractThe Roma are comprised of many founder groups of common Indian origins but different socio‐cultural characteristics. The Vlax Roma are one of the founder Roma populations characterized by a period of bondage in the historic Romanian principalities, and by the archaic Romanian language.
Peričić Salihović, Marijana   +5 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Romani Slavery in Romanian Historiography (1837–2023): Terminology, Perspectives, and External Influences

open access: yesCritical Romani Studies
This article traces how Romani slavery has been written into – and more often written out of – Romanian historiography from the earliest scholarly treatment by Mihail Kogălniceanu (1837) to the most recent documentary syntheses (2022).
Petre Petcuț
doaj   +1 more source

For a history of Romani self-appellations

open access: yesAnuac, 2019
The article attempts to contribute to the history of the self-appellations of so-called “Gypsy” populations starting from the first European documents that recorded them. Continuing the studies carried out in previous decades by several linguists, it will particularly try to show how Kalé and Rom(a)ničel(a) autonyms were much more highly used in modern
openaire   +3 more sources

Romani pride, Gorja shame:race and privilege in the archive [PDF]

open access: yes, 2021
There exists a dispersed digital archive of British (specifically here English and Welsh) Romani oral histories. Some recordings are held in museums and archives; others are available online.
Matthews, Jodie
core  

Old Blouses, Old Houses: Hauntings of Romani Slavery in the Production of Romanian Nationalism

open access: yesCritical Romani Studies
International organizations often hide under a veil of multiculturalism and inclusivity to enable neoliberal and nationalistic governmentalities in postsocialist Eastern Europe.
Stefania Cotei
doaj   +11 more sources

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