List of Illustrations
A Note on Terminology and Transliteration
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1 Backward Gypsies, Soviet Citizens: The
All-Russian Gypsy Union
Chapter 2 A Political Education: Soviet Values and
Practical Realities in Gypsy Schools
Chapter 3 Parasites, Pariahs, and Proletarians: Class
Struggle And the Forging of a Gypsy Proletariat
Chapter 4 Nomads into Farmers: Romani Activism and the
Territorialization of (In)Difference
Chapter 5 Pornography or Authenticity? Performing
Gypsiness on the Soviet Stage
Epilogue and Conclusion: “Am I a Gypsy or Not a
Gypsy?”: Nationality and the Performance of Soviet
Selfhood
Glossary of Terms and Abbreviations
Bibliography
Index
"An extensively researched study of a group about which we knew little previously, New Soviet Gypsies makes an outstanding contribution to the fields of Russian history, the history of the Roma, and the history of minority groups more generally. Brigid O'Keeffe provides not only a rich picture of the Roma in the Soviet Union, but also an important lens through which to examine the debates and dynamics of Soviet nationality policy." -- David Hoffmann, Department of History, The Ohio State University "This book clearly and successfully traces how Romani individuals actively participated in transforming themselves into Soviet selves, joining the cutting edge of historical and social science research that refuses to dismiss Romani agency in the world. Well researched, with careful attention to a wide array of archival sources, it offers sustained attention to the ways events and institutions and actions interweave, helping us to understand how those social patterns came to be." -- Alaina Lemon, Department of Anthropology, University of Michigan
Brigid O’Keeffe is an assistant professor in the Department of History at Brooklyn College of the City University of New York.
‘New Soviet Gypsies is an impressive and suggestive study of the
link between nation making and citizenship in the early Soviet
context. It’s also wonderfully written and richly researched.
Anyone interested in the history of nationality in the twentieth
century should read it.’
*Journal of Modern History vol 88:02:2016*
‘This is a meticulously researched and well-written work… O’Keeffe
is very good at showing the proverbial bigger picture within which
we ought to locate the attempted Sovietization of Russian
Roma.’
*Anthropos vol 110:2015*
‘Brigid O’Keeffe’s book is an intelligent study of Soviet
nationalities that an instructor who teaches ethnicity and
nationalism in any context should include as required reading in
his or her syllabus.’
*American Historical Review, October 2014*
‘This brilliant new study of the Roma’s plight in the early decades
of Soviet power in Russia opens up new avenues of discussion and
study of this fascinating ethnic group’s history… This study will
certainly become a classic in Roma studies.’
*Slavic Studies vol 73:03:2014*
‘Stories of trivialization and stylization of local historic
culture and their music and language abound in this fascinating
account… O’Keeffe’s book is well researched and tells an important
tale of Roma history and struggle. Highly recommended. Most
levels/Libraries.’
*Choice Magazine, vol 51:06:2014*
"This book is a welcome addition to the study of minority groups in
the former USSR, particularly of a stigmatized group. O’Keefe
explores questions that will be of interest to folklorists,
anthropologists, linguists, and historians studying the peoples of
this region and also minority ethnic identity and how it is
negotiated in institutional contexts."
*Journal of Folklore Research Reviews*
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