A crucial contribution to Romani studies focuses on a single Slovak
village to explore universal issues of belonging.
In this important contribution to contemporary Romani studies, Jan Ort
focuses his anthropological research on a village in eastern Slovakia
reputed for the ostensibly seamless coexistence of its ethnically and
linguistically heterogeneous inhabitants. Ort offers an ethnographic
critique of this idyllic view, showing how historical shifts, as well as
the naturalization of inequality and hierarchies, have led to the
present situation between the village's Roma inhabitants and other
ethnic populations. However, he also shows examples and methods of
subversion and resistance to the village's current power dynamics. Based
primarily on participant observation within Roma families, Ort's
long-term research results in a fascinating book replete with
ethnographic descriptions that allow readers to understand local
experiences, contexts, and divisions. These insights about the village
lead to the key question of the book: Who actually is a local?