Reestablished on February 5th 1990, the Romanian Peasant Museum is the continuator of a long museological tradition. In 1906 the first autonomous museum for peasant art was established. Lucky circumstances brought the art historian Alexandru Tzigara-Samurcaş as its first director. He renamed the institution the Ethnography and National Art Museum and from 1912 on, the National Art Museum. During the 40 years of Tzigara Samurcaş’ leadership the museum was in the avant-garde of European museology.
The so-called “liberation” of 1944 led to the “liberation” of the museum from its own home and its replacement with the Lenin-Stalin Museum.The National Art Museum moved, as a tenant, in Ştirbei Palace on Calea Victoriei, for 25 years and under a new name: the Popular Art Museum of the Romanian Popular/Socialist Republic. During this period, the museographers were forced to “forget” exhibiting some valuable collection pieces, especially the religious ones. However, they succeeded in increasing the heritage of the museum with three times as much objects of peasant art.
In 1978, the Popular Art Museum and the Village Museum are united in one institution. The unification mainly meant that most of collections of the Popular Art museum remained hidden in a long and unhealthy sleep until 1990 when the museum was reestablished and brought back to its home on Kiseleff no.3.
MARTOR nr. 25/2020 // MARRIAGE-MAKING AMONG ROMA IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE: PRACTICES, IMAGINARIES, ECONOMIES
A apărut numărul 25/2020 al revistei MARTOR, cu tema „Marriage-making Among Roma in Central and Eastern Europe: Practices, Imaginaries, Economies”, volum coordonat de Ana Chirițoiu și Cătălina Tesăr. Tema numărului din acest an cuprinde 12 studii și analize (etnografice, legale, dialogice și vizuale) despre cum se încheie căsătoriile în diferite comunități rome din centrul și estul Europei. Volumul se încheie cu trei recenzii a unor titluri de referință în domeniu.
Revista se găsește online integral la adresa: http://martor.muzeultaranuluiroman.ro/
Prețul: 17,12 lei.
CUPRINS:
Ana CHIRIȚOIU, Cătălina TESĂR, Introduction: Roma Marriage-Making, Between the Constraints of “Tradition” and the “Choices” of Liberalization
I. Unpacking “Tradition”: Genealogies, Contingencies, Ideologies
Martin OLIVERA, Entre idéologie nobiliaire, utopie égalitaire et circonstances singulieres : le « bon mariage » chez les Roms Gabori
Bogdan MATEESCU, Marriage and Family Life of Romanians and Roma: Aspects Reflected in the First Two Modern Romanian Censuses
Grégoire COUSIN, « O abjáv kaj sas maškár aménde phaṟada e dušmania ». Généalogie d’un mariage
II. Marrying In, Out, and Sideways: Liberalization and Change
Andreea RACLEȘ, “Free Choice” in Marriage-Making among Romanianised Roma
Margaret BEISSINGER, “Lăutar Space”: Marriage, Weddings, and Identity among Romani Musicians in Romania
Jonathan LARCHER, Tout n’est qu’histoire d’amour. Une chronique personnelle sur les sentiments et la crainte de Dieu en « tsiganie »
Cecília KOVAI, Constraints on “Free Choice”: The Role of Marriage in a Hungarian Romungro Community
III. Law and Activism in the Case of Early Age and/or Arranged Marriages
Maria G. NIKOLOVA, Parents, Children, Marriage: Bulgarian Courts’ View on Romani Marriage-making
Angéla KÓCZÉ, Ana CHIRIȚOIU, “What’s the Point of Studying Kinship if You Don’t Connect It to the Broader Power Structure.” A Dialogue
Iulia HAȘDEU, Les femmes rom, entre statut de Romni et démocratie sexuelle. Essai d’anthropologie féministe
IV. Visual Representations of Roma Marriages
Alina ȘERBAN, Cătălina TESĂR, “We Start Our Lives from Different Positions.” A Dialogue
Ileana Gabriela SZASZ, Dare to Record! The Ethics of Decision Making in Fieldwork Documentary Practice
V. Book Reviews
Norah Benarrosh-Orsoni. 2019. La maison double. Lieux, routes et objects d’une migration rom. Nanterre : Societe d’Ethnologie, 250 p.
(recenzie de Cătălina TESĂR)
Rachel Humphris. 2019. Home-Land: Romanian Roma, Domestic Spaces and the State. Bristol: Bristol University Press, 240 p.
(recenzie de László FOSZTÓ)
Paloma Gay y Blasco, and Liria Hernandez. 2020. Writing Friendship. A Reciprocal Ethnography. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan, 189 p.
(recenzie de Ana CHIRIȚOIU)

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