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ROMA MINORITY (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   133835


On pride, shame, passing and avoidance: an inquiry into Roma young people's relationship with their ethnicity / Pantea, Maria-Carmen   Journal Article
Pantea, Maria-Carmen Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Roma ethnicity is one of the most stigmatised identities of today's Europe. An emerging discourse on 'Roma pride' aims to reshape this widespread perception, especially among the educated youth. Drawing on 57 interviews with young people with/in higher education in Romania, this article looks into their experiences of self-identification as Roma. On the one hand, this article identified a tendency for young people to move in a conceptual space, dominated by an understanding of ethnicity as bounded and static. On the other hand, it identified an emerging tendency for flexible, hybrid identifications that deliberately avoid reifying ethnicity (e.g. being a Roma of a different kind and living beyond ethnic labels). The article calls for more informed approaches addressing ethnic identification, which avoid assumptions of stable identification and embrace more complex understandings of the social dynamics involved.
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2
ID:   153228


Understanding the rise of the far right from a local perspective: structural and cultural conditions of ethno-traditionalist inclusion and racial exclusion in rural Hungary / Szombati, Kristóf; Feischmidt, Margit   Journal Article
Szombati, Kristóf Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This paper analyses the reconfiguration of social relations in rural Hungary after the collapse of socialism as well as the cultural idioms in which these changes were interpreted in order to unearth the connection between structural transformation, the re-articulation of ethnic and peasant traditions and the discourse on Roma as a threat to communal harmony. The locality in the focus of our case study is a village that played a major role in the rise of the far-right Jobbik party. By applying an ethnographic approach, we seek to uncover structural forces, discourses and agencies that help explain the success of the anti-Roma mobilization campaign that ended with Jobbik’s electoral victory.
Key Words Nationalism  Racism  Hungary  Xenophobia  Far Right  Roma Minority 
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