It is the first in-depth ethnographic monograph on the New Right in Central and Eastern Europe.
It is based on an innovative relational and process-oriented methodology that combines case studies with an analysis of events in the political public sphere.It is also original in combining a focus on history with an analysis on recent socio-political transformations.
Its bottom-up approach to politics is also unconventional outside the subdiscipline of political anthropology.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
List of maps and tables
Foreword
Ivan Szelenyi
Preface
Introduction
Chapter 1. Historic Contextualization: "Gypsies", "Magyars" and the State
Chapter 2. Popular Racism in the Northeast: The Case of Gyöngyöspata
Chapter 3. Redemptive Anti-Gypsyism: The Transposition of Struggles from the Social to the Political Domain
Chapter 4. Right-wing Rivalry and the Dual State
Chapter 5. The Limits of Racist Mobilization: The Case of Devecser
Chapter 6. From Racism to Ultranationalism: Jobbik's Transformation Through Ethnographic Lens
Epilogue
References
Index