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Other Borders
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10 November 2023

Rudari Lingurari families, one of many significant minority groups in Southeastern Europe, have been characterized by mobility since the end of the nineteenth century, from voluntary border crossings to deportations and forced relocations. Other Borders draws from participatory, multi-site ethnographic research to explore rudari families' cultural and relational frames of mobility through their social and economic organization. Sabrina Tosi Cambini develops the concept of 'moving gaze' to more effectively explore rudari migration paths across multiple countries, their occupation of unoccupied buildings in Italy, their housing practices in both Italy and Romania, and the movement of their objects, ideas and imaginaries.
List of Figures, Graphs, Maps and Tables
Acknowledgements
Foreword
Part I: History and Mobility
Chapter 1. The Nine Sisters
Chapter 2. Genealogical, Historical, Geographical Space
Chapter 3. Ethnographic Morceau: Memorial
Chapter 4. Marriage Rites and Practices
Chapter 5. Ethnographic Morceau: Ionica’s Conversion
Part II: The Time of Migrations: Home, Mobility and Transnationalism
Prologue
Chapter 6. Leaving
Chapter 7. Migratory Décalages
Chapter 8. The Intertwining of Migration and Fights for the Right to Housing and to the City
Chapter 9. Ethnographic Morceau: Displacements and Evictions
Chapter 10. Settlement Strategies after la Luzzi
Chapter 11. Work in the Migration Context
Chapter 12. Acasă/At Home
Chapter 13. Ethnographic Morceau: Feeling Lonely
Chapter 14. Shifting Sense
Chapter 15. Ethnographic Morceau: Seven Sisters
Conclusion: An Open Field: The Rudari and Brâncuși
Bibliography
Index