Moving images of exclusion: Persisting tropes in the filmic representation of European Roma |
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Authors: | Habiba Hadziavdic |
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Affiliation: | Department of Modern and Classical Languages, University of Saint Thomas - Minneapolis Campus, Saint Paul, MN, USA |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACTThis paper analyses the most prominent tropes in the earliest and most recent filmic representations of Roma. Stereotypical images of Roma abound in many fictional features as well as documentaries, from the representation of Roma as eternal nomads to racially prejudiced depictions of Roma women and the alleged innateness of music to Roma. Because images and modes of representation change over time, the paper juxtaposes the earliest portrayals of Roma with those produced in the last 15 years. The analysis particularly centres on two dominant reoccurring tropes: types of spaces typically occupied by Roma in film, that is the lack of a place or so-called placeless-ness of Roma; the gendered other, or the Roma woman and the culturally and ethnically othered Roma musician. Ultimately, by analysing how these tropes have persisted in varying forms over 100 years, this work points to the filmic imagery that perpetuates antiziganism, but also how the same has changed over the years to offer possible counter-narratives. |
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Keywords: | Antigypsyism Roma film representation discrimination stereotypes |
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