Stopping the “Virus of the Gypsy Emptiness”

Racialization of the Bulgarian Roma During the Covid-19 Pandemic in Bulgaria

Authors

  • Camilla Salvatore

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14712/12128112.4141

Keywords:

antigypsism, racialization, enregistrement, categorization, pandemic

Abstract

In Bulgaria, such as in many other European countries, the so-called “Gypsy/Roma” are the target of the rhetoric of extreme right parties who are pointing at them as the main responsible for a situation of crisis and fueling hate between groups. With the beginning of the COVID-19 epidemic, the already existing tension between the majority of Bulgarians with non Roma origin and the so-called Tsigani has intensified and been fueled by political discourses that urge to “close the ghettos everywhere” (A. Dzhambaski, 18.03.2020) which have been translated into safety measures – such as closure, disinfection and introduction of a system of control access to the neighborhoods where the “population of Roma origin” is supposed to live. By analyzing an official discourse of this kind and comments and reactions to it, we will see how the stereotypes concerning Bulgarian Roma are legitimated by institutional voices that are alimenting antigypsism (Wippermann, 2005; Knudsen, 2005, Nicolae, 2006, Piasere, 2010; 2011). We will try to see these attitude as consisting in a semiotic process of categorization and enregistrement (Agha, 2007) through which particular features of individuals are identified as typical of the group they are supposed to belong to.

Author Biography

Camilla Salvatore

is a PhD student in general anthropology at Charles University, Prague and sciences of languages at Université Paris Cité. Her research interests are: language ideologies and language practices, processes of commodification of languages and cultures, stigmatization of the so-called “minorities”. In her master thesis (Università di Torino) she investigated the process of self-identification of the inhabitants of the so-called “Gypsy Ghetto” of Stolipinovo (Plovdiv, Bulgaria). In her PhD thesis, she is investigating how the Roma inhabitants of Kotel (Bulgaria) cope with stigmatization through the re-interpretation and re-appropriation of the local culture(s) – especially music – and language(s).

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Published

2023-09-01

How to Cite

Salvatore, C. (2023). Stopping the “Virus of the Gypsy Emptiness”: Racialization of the Bulgarian Roma During the Covid-19 Pandemic in Bulgaria. Lidé města, 25(2), 171-195. https://doi.org/10.14712/12128112.4141

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Articles