Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-c9gpj Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-11T11:40:31.199Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Gypsies: A Selected Bibliography (Central and Eastern Europe)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

Abstract

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Bibliography
Copyright
Copyright © 1991 by the Association for the Study of the Nationalities of the USSR and Eastern Europe, Inc. 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bibliographies

Binns, Dennis. A Gypsy Bibliography. Volume 1. Manchester: Dennis Binns Publications, 1982. [List of 1306 items, mostly British, almost all post-1914.] Volume 2, 1986; Volume 3, 1990.Google Scholar
Black, George. A Gypsy Bibliography. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1914. Gypsy Lore Society Monograph No. 1. [4577 international items, arranged alphabetically by author, with a meticulous subject index on pp. 199226. Some references have brief and occasionally tart annotations.]Google Scholar
“Eastern Europe: Research Sources.’ “Newsletter of the Gypsy Lore Society 13:4 (November 1990), 6-7. [The list is primarily from Radio Free Europe, CIA translation agencies, and newspaper articles, including the Romanian Gypsy newspaperGlasul Romilor (Gypsy Voice), published for two issues in the 1930s.]Google Scholar
Gronemeyer, Reimer. Zigeuner in Osteuropa. Eine Bibliographie zu den Ländern Polen, Tschechoslowakei und Ungarn: mit einem Anhang über ältere sowjetische Literatur. Munich: K. G. Saur, 1983. [Annotated; works from 1945 to 1980, most material on Hungary; appendix of pre-1930 Soviet publications on pp. 235249.]Google Scholar
Theodoratus, Robert J. Europe: A Selected Ethnographic Bibliography. New Haven, CT: Human Relations Area Files, 1969. [Section on Gypsies, pp. 535541.]Google Scholar
Tong, Diane. Gypsies: A Multidisciplinary Annotated Bibliography. New York: Garland, forthcoming.Google Scholar
Tyrnauer, Gabrielle. Gypsies and the Holocaust: A Bibliography and Introductory Essay. Montreal: Interuniversity Centre for European Studies and Montreal Institute for Genocide Studies, 1989. [576 items, many in German.] 2nd ed., Montreal Institute for Genocide Studies, 1991.Google Scholar
Etudes Tsiganes, Paris, 1955 Google Scholar
Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society, Edinburgh (etc.), 1888–1982 (with interruptions), Maryland, U.S.A., 1991 Google Scholar
Lacio Drom, Rome, 1964 Google Scholar
Roma, Chandigarh, 1974 Google Scholar
Traveller Education, England, 1972 Google Scholar
Andronik, I. M.Evolution of Dwellings of Russian Gypsies.” Soviet Anthropology and Archeology 6:1 (1972), 328.Google Scholar
Bartosz, Adam. “Carpathian Gypsies and the Rural Community.” Ethnologia Polona 7 (1981), 2733.Google Scholar
Erdös, Kamill. “Jottings on Gypsy Judicature in Hungary.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 40:1-2 (January-April 1961), 5660.Google Scholar
Erdös, Kamill. “A Classification of Gypsies in Hungary.” Acta Ethnographica 6:3-4 (1958), 513.Google Scholar
Kaminski, Ignacy-Marek. “Identity Conflicts: Gypsy-Romany.” Working Paper, Institute of Social Anthropology, No. 14, University of Gothenburg, 1977.Google Scholar
Kaminski, Ignacy-Marek. “The State of Ambiguity: Studies of Gypsy Refugees.” Gothenburg: University of Gothenburg, Department of Social Anthropology, 1980.Google Scholar
Kenrick, D.Notes on the Gypsies in Bulgaria.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 45:3-4 (July-October 1966), 7784.Google Scholar
Lockwood, William G. “Gypsies.” Ed. Richard V. Weekes, Muslim Peoples. Vol. 1. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1984, pp. 304308.Google Scholar
Lockwood, William G.East European Gypsies in Western Europe: The Social and Cultural Adaptation of the Xoraxané.” Nomadic Peoples 21/22 (December 1986), 6370.Google Scholar
Mohamed-Salih, Margaret. “The Position of Gypsies in Finnish Society.” Diss., University of Manchester, 1985.Google Scholar
Nazarov, Kh. Kh. “Contemporary Ethnic Development of the Central Asian Gypsies (Liuli).” Soviet Anthropology and Archeology 21:3 (Winter 1982-1983), 328.Google Scholar
Sanarov, V. J.The Siberian Gypsies.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 49:3-4 (July-October 1970), 126137.Google Scholar
Silverman, Carol. “Bulgarian Gypsies: Adaptation in a Socialist Context.” Nomadic Peoples 21/22 (December 1986), 5162.Google Scholar
Stewart, Michael Sinclair. “Brothers in Song: The Persistence of (Vlach) Gypsy Identity and Community in Socialist Hungary.” Diss., London School of Economic and Political Science, 1987.Google Scholar
Stewart, Michael. “True Speech': Song and the Moral Order of a Hungarian Vlach Gypsy Community.” Man 24:1 (March 1989), 79102.Google Scholar
Vukanovic, T. P.The Manufacture of Pots and Pans Among the Gypsies of Kosovo and Metohija.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 40:1-2 (January-April 1961), 3544. [Economic adaptation]Google Scholar
Vukanovic, T. P.The Gypsy Population in Yugoslavia.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 42:1-2 (January-April 1963), 1027.Google Scholar
Alleaume, Armelle. “Les Tsiganes et la musique en Hongrie.” Ethnopsychologie 32:1 (1977), 6981.Google Scholar
Balász, János. A Hungarian Gypsy Artist. Budapest: CorvinaPress, 1977. New York: International Publications Service, 1977.Google Scholar
Courthiade, Marcel. “Jeunes poètes roms de Cassove.” Etudes Tsiganes 29:1 (1983), 29. [Rom poets from Kosovo, Yugoslavia.]Google Scholar
Cybulski, Mariusz. “Papusza and Her Poems.” Lacio Drom Supp. to 6 (December 1985), 21-31. [Six poems in English and Romani by Polish Gypsy poet Papusza (Bronis/awa Wajs), born in 1909.]Google Scholar
Dunin, Elsie. “Gypsy Wedding (in Skopje): Dance and Customs.” Midwest Folklore 4:7-8 (1971), 317326.Google Scholar
Garfias, Robert. “Dance Among the Urban Gypsies of Romania.” Yearbook for Traditional Music 16 (1984), 8496.Google Scholar
Hübschmannová, Milena. “Roma (Gypsies) in Czechoslovakia and Their Literature.” Studies in Indo-Asian Art and Culture 5 (1978), 3776.Google Scholar
Kovalcsik, Katalin. Vlach Gypsy Folk Songs in Slovakia. Budapest: Institute for Musicology in the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 1985.Google Scholar
Lakatos, Menyhért. “Artisti zingari autodidatti in Ungheria.” Lacio Drom 17:3 (May-June 1981), 1415.Google Scholar
Manush, Leksa. “The Problem of the Folk Music of the Gypsies: Sources of Gypsy Music in Europe.” Soviet Anthropology and Archeology 25:3 (1986–1987), 17-34. [Extensive bibliography incorporated in footnotes.] Martin, György. Hungarian Folk Dances. Budapest: Corvina, 1974. Rice, Timothy. “The Surla and Tapan Tradition in Yugoslav Macedonia.”Google Scholar
Galpin Society Journal 35:3 (1982), 122137.Google Scholar
Romanov, Manuš. 17 purane Rromane gila andar-i Bälgaria. Tarnov: Phralipe, 1990.Google Scholar
Salijesor, Seljajdin. Dživdipe maskar-o Rroma: Poemi. Preseva: Grafoflux, 1988.Google Scholar
Sárosi, Bálint. Gypsy Music. Budapest: Corvina Press, 1978.Google Scholar
Simic, Andrei. “Sevdah: The Ritual Containment of Machismo in the Balkans.” UCLA Journal of Dance Ethnology 3 (Spring 1979), 2636.Google Scholar
Vidic, Ljerka. “The Musical Practice of the Nomadic Rom in Bosnia and Hercegovina.” M.A. Thesis, Wesleyan University, 1987.Google Scholar
Vig, Rudolf. “Gipsy Folk Songs from the Béla Bartók and Zoltán Kodály Collections.” Studia Musicologica 16:1-4 (1974), 89131.Google Scholar
Vukanovic, T. P.Musical Culture Among the Gypsies of Yugoslavia.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 41:1-2 (January-April 1962), 4161.Google Scholar
Beckers, Jan. Me hum Sinthu: Ikben zigeuner: Gesprekkenmetzigeuners over de vervolging in de periode ‘40-45 en de jaren daarna. Den Haag: Horus, 1980.Google Scholar
Braun, Hans. “A Sinto Survivor Speaks.” Papers from the Sixth and Seventh Annual Meetings, Gypsy Lore Society, North American Chapter, ed. Grumet, Joanne. New York: GLSNA, 1986, pp. 165171.Google Scholar
Cioaba, Joan. “Il genocidio in Romania: una testimonianza.” Lacio Drom 20:2-3 (March-June 1984), 5456.Google Scholar
Heger, Heinz. “The Polish Boys and the Gypsy Capo.” The Men With the Pink Triangle. Trans. David Fernbach. London: Gay Men's Press, 1980; Boston: Alyson Publications, 1980, pp. 5766.Google Scholar
Kochanowski, Jan. “Maskir Romende (Among Gypsies): The Views of a Latvian Gypsy.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 44:3-4 (July-October 1965), 137140.Google Scholar
Levak, Zlato. “La persecuzione degli Zingari: una testimonianza.” Lacio Drom 12:3 (May-June 1976), 23.Google Scholar
Levi, Primo. “(Tra le baracche di Auschwitz) Lo zingaro.” Lacio Drom 17:6 (November-December 1981), 2629.Google Scholar
Nomberg-Przytyk, Sara. “The Little Gypsy,” Auschwitz: True Tales from a Grotesque Land. Chapel Hill and London: University of North Carolina Press, 1985, pp. 8384.Google Scholar
Plotkin, Diane. “The Story of Leo Laufer of Birkenau,” in “Historiographic Analysis of a Survivor's Narrative,” Diss., U. Texas Arlington, 1989.Google Scholar
Stojka, Ceija. Wir leben im Verborgenen: Erinnerungen einer Rom-Zigeunerin. Vienna: Picus, 1988. [Autobiography of a Gypsy survivor of Auschwitz]Google Scholar
Vexler, Yancou. “J'étais médecin des Tsiganes à Auschwitz.” Monde Gitan 27 (1973), 110.Google Scholar
Zubák, Čiriklo Luboš. “Čačikane ačhibena/Storie accadute.” Lacio Drom 3:21 (May-June 1985), 25. [A Czech Gypsy's account of the racism he has encountered.]Google Scholar
Acton, Thomas. “Using the Gypsies’ Own Language: Two Contrasting Approaches in Hungarian Schools.” Traveller Education 22 (1987), 1115.Google Scholar
Csapo, Marg. “Teaching Gypsy Children in Hungarian Schools.” B.C. [British Columbia] Journal of Special Education 4:3 (Fall 1980), 283289.Google Scholar
Csapo, Marg. “Concerns Related to the Education of Romany Students in Hungary, Austria and Finland.” Comparative Education 18:2 (1982), 205219.Google Scholar
Rebernak, Nives. “Pismenost’ i obrazovanost’ romskogo stanovnistva” [The Literacy and Education of the Gypsy Population]. Sociologija-sela 23 (1985), 8790, 155-68. [“Empirical data from 231 Gypsies in Yugoslavia reveal that many have had no formal schooling, yet have nonetheless learned to read and write to a limited extent.”]Google Scholar
Varnagy, Elemer. The Education of Gypsy Children. Pecs: University of Pecs: School of Education, 1987.Google Scholar
Hübschmannová, Milena. “Oral Folklore of Slovak Roms.” Lacio Drom Supp. to 6 (December 1985), 6170.Google Scholar
Kenrick, Donald. “The Oral Tradition Among the Romanies in Bulgaria.” Lacio Drom Supp. to 6 (December 1985), 7782.Google Scholar
Nagy, Olga. “The Persistence of Archaic Traits Among Gypsy Story-Telling Communities in Romania.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 1:4 (1978), 221239.Google Scholar
Necas, Ctibor. “K socialni adaptaci Cikanu na Straznicku.” Narodopisne Aktuality 19:1 (1982), 2532.Google Scholar
Rice, Timothy. “A Macedonian Sobor: Anatomy of a Celebration.” Journal of American Folklore 93:368 (1980), 113128.Google Scholar
Tong, Diane. “Aspects of Narrative Tradition in a Greek Gypsy Community.” Lacio Drom Supp. to 6 (December 1985), 8390.Google Scholar
Tong, Diane. Gypsy Folktales. San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1989. [Includes 38 stories from the countries covered here.]Google Scholar
Vekerdi, Jozsef. “The Gypsy's Role in the Preservation of Non-Gypsy Folklore.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 1:2 (1979), 7986.Google Scholar
Mróz, Lech. “Jerzy Ficowski and Other Gypsiologists in Poland.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 47:3-4 (July-October 1968), 134141.Google Scholar
Ackovic, Dragoljub. “Suffering of Romas in Yugoslavia in Second World War.” Giessener Hefte für Tsiganologie 3:1-4 (1986), 128132.Google Scholar
Ayass, Wolfgang, Gilsenbach, Reimar, Körber, Ursula, Scherer, Klaus, Wagner, Patrick, and Winter, Matthias. Feinderklärung und Prävention: Kriminalbiologie, Zigeunerforschung und Asozialenpolitik. Berlin: Rotbuch Verlag, 1988.Google Scholar
Bernadac, Christian. L'Holocauste oublié: le massacre des Tsiganes. Paris: Editions France-Empire, 1979.Google Scholar
Brucker-Boroujerdi, Ute, and Wipperman, W.Das Zigeunerlager Berlin-Marzahn, 1936–1945.” Pogrom 130 (1978), 7780.Google Scholar
Cargas, Harry James. “The Continuum of Gypsy Suffering,” Reflections of a Post-Auschwitz Christian. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1989, pp. 7590.Google Scholar
Colinon, Maurice. “Le martyre gitan sous le nazisme.” Monde Gitan 4 (1967), 14.Google Scholar
Crowe, David. “Minorities in Hungary since 1948.” Nationalities Papers 17:1 (Fall 1989), 2235.Google Scholar
Crowe, David, and Kolsti, John, eds. The Gypsies of Eastern Europe. Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe, 1991.Google Scholar
Davidová, Eva. “The Gypsies in Czechoslovakia.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society, 49:3-4 (July-October 1970), 84-97; 50:12 (January-April 1971), 4054.Google Scholar
Dobroszycki, Lucjan, ed. The Chronicle of the Łódż Ghetto, 1941–1944. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1984.Google Scholar
Ficowski, Jerzy. “The Fate of Polish Gypsies.” Genocide and Human Rights: A Global Anthology. Ed. Jack Nusan Porter. Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1982, pp. 166177.Google Scholar
Ficowski, Jerzy. Gypsies in Poland: History and Customs. Warsaw: Interpress Publishers, 1989.Google Scholar
Friedman, Philip. “The Extermination of the Gypsies.” Jewish Frontier (1951), 11-14. Reprinted in Porter, Jack Nusan, Genocide and Human Rights . Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1982, pp. 151157.Google Scholar
Gheorghe, Nicolae. “Origin of Romas’ Slavery in the Rumanian Principalities.” Roma 7:1 (1983), 1227.Google Scholar
Hancock, Ian. The Pariah Syndrome. Ann Arbor: Karoma, 1987.Google Scholar
Hancock, Ian. “Amare Rroma ande o porrajmos.” Paper presented at the International Congress of the Rom and Cinti Union, Mülheim-Ruhr, November 1-4, 1990. To appear in the Proceedings. [On Roma in the Holocaust.]Google Scholar
Kabat, Ladislas. “Le Massacre des Tsiganes en Pologne.” Monde Gitan 33 (1975), 1114.Google Scholar
Kalisch, Shoshana with Barbara Meister. Yes, We Sang! Songs of the Ghettos and Concentration Camps. New York: Harper & Row, 1985.Google Scholar
Karpati, Mirella. “Il Genocidio degli Zingari.” Lacio Drom 23 (January-February 1987), 1634.Google Scholar
Karpati, Mirella, et al. “I crimini contro l'umanità in Polonia e in Europa 1939–1945.” Lacio Drom 20:2-3 (March-June 1984), 3-47. [“Translation of papers concerning persecution and extermination of Gypsies, read at a meeting organized by the Commission of Inquiry into Nazi crimes, Polish Ministry of Justice, held April 14-17, 1983. Contributions by Lech Mroz, Jacek Wilczur, Stanislaw Zabierowski, Cezary Jablonski, Donald Kenrick, and Mirella Karpati.”]Google Scholar
Kenrick, Donald and Puxon, Grattan. The Destiny of Europe's Gypsies. New York: Basic Books, 1972.Google Scholar
Kenrick, Donald and Puxon, Grattan. “Letter to the Editor” [Addenda to The Destiny of Europe's Gypsies]. Holocaust and Genocide Studies 4:2 (1989), 251254.Google Scholar
King, Christine E.Some Lesser-Known Victims of Totalitarian Persecution.” Patterns of Prejudice 16:2 (1982), 1526.Google Scholar
Kogon, Eugen. The Theory and Practice of Hell: The German Concentration Camps and the System Behind Them. Trans. Heinz Norden. New York: Berkley, 1950.Google Scholar
Lassère, Juliette. “Les gitans d'Autriche sous l'occupation nazi.” Monde Gitan 20 (1971), 2021.Google Scholar
Lifton, Robert Jay. The Nazi Doctors: Medical Killing and the Psychology of Genocide. New York: Basic Books, 1986.Google Scholar
Maximoff, Matéo. “Germany and the Gypsies: From the Gypsy's Point of View.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 25:3-4 (July-October 1946), 104108.Google Scholar
Müller-Hill, Benno. Murderous Science: Elimination by Scientific Selection of Jews, Gypsies, and Others, Germany 1933–1945. New York: Oxford University Press, 1988.Google Scholar
Nečas, Ctibor. “The Czech Gypsies During the Nazi Occupation.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 2:1 (1982), 6975.Google Scholar
Noakes, Jeremy. “Social Outcasts in Nazi Germany.” History Today 35 (December 1985), 1519.Google Scholar
Novitch, Myriam. “Half a Million Gypsies Victims of the Nazi Terror.” UNESCO Courier (October 1984), 2425.Google Scholar
Proctor, Robert. Racial Hygiene: Medicine Under the Nazis. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1988.Google Scholar
Puxon, Grattan and Kenrick, Donald. Bibahtale berša. London: Romanestan Publications, 1990. [Romani-language translation of the authors’ Destiny of Europe's Gypsies—see above under Kenrick.]Google Scholar
Schechtman, Joseph B.The Gypsy Problem.” Midstream 12:9 (November 1966), 5260.Google Scholar
Sigot, Jacques. “La dernière guerre et les campes des nomades.” Etudes Tsiganes 3 (1987), 2938.Google Scholar
Soulis, George C.The Gypsies in the Byzantine Empire and the Balkans in the Late Middle Ages.” Dumbarton Oaks Papers 15 (1961), 141165.Google Scholar
Szymanski, Tadeusz. “The ‘Hospital’ in the Family Camp for Gypsies at Auschwitz-Birkenau.” Przeglad Szymanski 2:2 (1971), 145.Google Scholar
Tillion, Germaine. Ravensbrück. Trans. Gerald Satterwhite. Garden City, NY: Doubleday/Anchor, 1975.Google Scholar
Trials of War Criminals before the Nuernberg Military Tribunals. Superintendent of Documents, Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1949. [Section on Gypsies in Volume 4.]Google Scholar
Tyrnauer, Gabrielle. “The Fate of the Gypsies during the Holocaust.” Washington: U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council Special Report, 1985.Google Scholar
Wiesenthal, Simon. “The Extermination of the Gypsies,” The Murderers Among Us: The Simon Wiesenthal Memoirs. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1967, pp. 238242.Google Scholar
Wiesenthal, Simon. “Jews and Gypsies,” Justice, Not Vengeance. New York: Grove Weidenfeld, 1989, pp. 219223.Google Scholar
Wytwycky, Bohdan. The Other Holocaust: Many Circles of Hell. Washington, D.C.: The Novak Report, 1980.Google Scholar
Zülch, Tilman, ed. In Auschwitz vergast, bis heute verfolgt: zur Situation der Roma (Zigeuner) in Deutschland und Europa. Hamburg: Rowohlt, 1979.Google Scholar
Ariste, Paul. “On Two Intonations in a Romany Dialect.” Estonian Papers in Phonetics (1978), 57.Google Scholar
Calvet, Georges. Lexique Tsigane: Dialecte des Erlides de Sofia. Paris: Publications Orientalistes de France, 1982.Google Scholar
Cortiade, Marcel. “E lavenqe save nane an-i chib Romani.” Ed. Patrick Williams, Tsiganes: Identité, évolution. Paris: Syros, 1989, pp. 386394. [On augmenting the contemporary Romani lexicon.]Google Scholar
Cortiade, Marcel. Xaca dume: But godi. Tirana: National Printing Office, 1990. [A study of Romani syntax through an examination of its proverbs.]Google Scholar
Friedman, Victor A.Balkan Romani Modality and Other Balkan Languages.” Folia Slavica 7:3 (1985), 381389.Google Scholar
Haarmann, Harald. Spracherhaltung und Sprachwechsel als Probleme der interlingualen Soziolinguistik: Studien zur Gruppenmehrsprachigkeit der Zigeuner in der Sowjetunion. Hamburg: Helmut Buske, 1980.Google Scholar
Heinschink, Mozes. “La langue tsigane parlée en Autriche et en Yougoslavie.” Etudes Tsiganes 24 (1978), 820.Google Scholar
Hübschmannová-, Milena. “Bilingualism Among the Slovak Rom.” International Journal of the Sociology of Language 19 (1979), 3349.Google Scholar
Igla, Birgit. “Das Romani von Ajia Varvara: Deskriptive und Historische-Vergleichende Darstellung eines Zigeuner Dialekts.” Diss., Ruhr University, Bochum, Germany, 1989.Google Scholar
Jusuf, Saip. Romani Gramatika. Skopje: Nasha Kniga, 1980. [Grammar of Romani written in Romani.]Google Scholar
Kenrick, Donald. “The Romani Dialect of a Musician from Razgrad.” Linguistique Balkanique (Sofia) 11:2 (1967), 7178.Google Scholar
Kenrick, Donald. “Morphology and Lexicon of the Romany Dialect of Kotel, Bulgaria.” Diss., University of London, 1969.Google Scholar
Kochanowski, Jan. Gypsy Studies. 2 vols. New Delhi: International Academy of Indian Culture, 1963. [2nd volume is a collection of folktales in the author's Latvian Romani dialect.]Google Scholar
Kostov, Kiril. “Aus der Syntax der Zigeunersprache Bulgariens.” Linguistique Balkanique 4 (1962), 131146.Google Scholar
Kostov, Kiril. “Zur Bedeutung des Zigeunerischen für die Erforschung grammatischer Interferenzerscheinungen.” Linguistique Balkanique 16:2 (1973), 99113.Google Scholar
Lípa, Jiři. “Cases of Coexistence of Two Varieties of Romani in the Same Territory in Slovakia.” International Journal of the Sociology of Language 19 (1979), 5157.Google Scholar
McDaniel, Dana S.Conditions on WH-Chains.” Diss., The Graduate Center of the City University of New York, 1986. [Contains an extensive grammatical discussion of Pristina-Skopje Romani.]Google Scholar
Messing, Gordon M. A Greek Romany Glossary: As Spoken in Agia Varvara (Athens). Columbus, OH: Slavica, 1988.Google Scholar
Pobozniak, T. Grammar of the Lovari Dialect. Krakow: PolskaAkademia Nauk, 1963.Google Scholar
Puxon, Grattan. “Romanès and Language Policy in Jugoslavia.” International Journal of the Sociology of Language 19 (1979), 8390.Google Scholar
Réger, Zita. “Bilingual Gypsy Children in Hungary: Explorations in ‘Natural’ Second-Language Acquisition at an Early Age.” International Journal of the Sociology of Language 19 (1979), 5982.Google Scholar
Réger, Zita. “Language Groups Among the Gypsies in Hungary and Some Aspects of Their Oral Culture.” The Less Widely Taught Languages of Europe. Dublin: IRAAL, 1988.Google Scholar
Sapoval, Viktor. “Les emprunts nominaux et les emprunts verbaux slaves dans la langue tsigane.” Balkansko Ezikoznanie/Linguistique Balkanique 27:1 (1984), 6162.Google Scholar
Tong, Diane. “Language Use and Attitudes Among the Gypsies of Thessaloniki.” Anthropological Linguistics 25 (1983), 375385.Google Scholar
Tong, Diane. “Romani as Symbol: Sociolinguistic Strategies of the Gypsies of Thessaloniki.” Papers from the Fourth and Fifth Annual Meetings, Gypsy Lore Society, North American Chapter, ed. Grumet, Joanne. New York: GLSNA, 1985, pp. 179187.Google Scholar
Valtonen, Pertti. “Trends in Finnish Romani.” International Journal of the Sociology of Language 19 (1979), 121124.Google Scholar
Ventzel, R. V. Trans. S. S. Gitman. The Gypsy Language. Moscow: Nauka, 1983.Google Scholar
Acton, Thomas. “Meetings of the Social and War Crimes Commissions of the World Romani Congress. April 25-29, 1972. A Summary Report.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 51:3-4 (July-October 1972), 96101.Google Scholar
Beck, Sam. “Ethnicity, Class and Public Policy: Tsigani-Gypsies in Socialist Romnia.” Giessener Hefte für Tsiganologie 3:1-4 (1986), 109127.Google Scholar
Davidova, E. and Guy, D. E. “Czechoslovakia and Her Gypsies.” Ed. Thomas Acton, Current Changes Among British Gypsies and Their Place in International Patterns of Development. Oxford: Romanestan, 1971, pp. 7881.Google Scholar
Gheorghe, Nicolae, and Hancock, Ian. “Report of the International Romani Union on the Current Situation of Roma Throughout the World.” Manchaca, TX: International World Romani Union (USA), 1991. [Emphasis on human-rights violations in Romania.]Google Scholar
Gronemeyer, Reimer, ed. Eigensinn und Hilfe: Zigeuner in der Sozialpolitik heutiger Leistungsgesellschaften. Giessen: Focus, 1983.Google Scholar
Guy, Willy. “Ways of Looking at Roms: The Case of Czechoslovakia.” Ed. Farnham Rehfisch, Gypsies, Tinkers and other Travellers. London: Academic Press, 1975, pp. 201229.Google Scholar
Guy, Willy. “The Attempt of Socialist Czechoslovakia to Assimilate Its Gypsy Population.” Diss., University of Bristol, 1977.Google Scholar
Watch, Helsinki. Destroying Ethnic Identity: The Gypsies of Bulgaria. A Helsinki Watch Report. [Written by Theodore Zang, Jr.] New York and Washington: June 1991.Google Scholar
Watch, Helsinki. Destroying Ethnic Identity: The Persecution of Gypsies in Romania. A Helsinki Watch Report. [Written by Holly Cartner.] New York and Washington: September 1991.Google Scholar
Ionescu, Dan. “The Gypsies Organise.” Report on Eastern Europe 1:26 (June 29, 1990), 3944.Google Scholar
Join-Lambert, Pierre. “Discriminations raciales et Tsiganes.” Revue des Droits de l'Homme 5:1 (1972), 143173.Google Scholar
Kawczynski, Rudko. “E beda le Romenge ande e akanutni Evropa.” Paper circulated at the International Congress of Rom and Cinti Union, Mülheim-Ruhr, November 1-4, 1990. To appear in the Proceedings. [Discussion of current social and political problems facing Roma in contemporary Europe.]Google Scholar
Kenrick, D. S. “The World Romani Congress.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society (July-October 1971), 101108.Google Scholar
Kostelancik, David J.The Gypsies of Czechoslovakia: Political and Ideological Considerations in the Development of Policy.” Studies in Comparative Communism 22:4 (Winter 1989), 307321.Google Scholar
Marcus, Naomi. “On the Job … in the U.S.S.R.Columbia Journalism Review 27:1 (May/June 1988), 4850.Google Scholar
Matras, Yaron and Hancock, Ian. “Rezoluciji e EUROM-eske.” Hamburg: The Rom and Cinti Union, 1990. [Resolutions of the European Romani Parliament and description of its functions.]Google Scholar
Mirga, Andrzej. “Me Som Rom, Tumen San Gadzé.” Etnografia Polska 22:2 (1978), 177183.Google Scholar
Oliner, Samuel P. and Hallum, Ken. “Minority Contempt for Oppressors: A Comparative Analysis of Jews and Gypsies.” California Sociologist 1:1 (Winter 1978), 4157.Google Scholar
Partos, Ferenc. “A cigany es nem cigany lakossag velemenye a fobb tarsadalompolitikai celkituzesekrol” [Survey Opinions of Gypsies and Non-Gypsies on Major Sociopolitical Goals in Hungary]. Szociologia 1 (1980), 117.Google Scholar
Pavel, Dan. Trans. Juliana Geran Pilon. “Wanderers: Romania's Hidden Victims.” The New Republic (March 4, 1991), 1213.Google Scholar
Puxon, Grattan. “Gypsies and the Czech Crisis.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 48:1-2 (January-April 1969), 5759.Google Scholar
Puxon, Grattan. “RomainMacedonia.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 1:2 (1976), 128132.Google Scholar
Puxon, Grattan. “Gypsies: Blacks of East Europe.” Nation (April 17, 1976), 460464.Google Scholar
Radio Free Europe—Radio Liberty. “Stereotypes Projected to Jews, Blacks and Gypsies by East Europeans and Austrians.” Radio Free Europe—Radio Liberty, 1980.Google Scholar
Schonfeld, Roland, ed. Nationalitätenprobleme in Südosteuropa. Vienna: Oldenbourg, 1987. [Contains discussion of Hungarian government policies toward Gypsies.]Google Scholar
Seewann, Gerhard. “Zigeuner in Ungarn.” Zeitschrift f r Gegenwartsforschung 36:1 (1987), 1932.Google Scholar
Seybold, Katrin and Rosenberg, B.Zusammenhalt ist etwas kostbares.” Courage 6 (May 1981), 1719.Google Scholar
Skilling, H. Gordon. Charter 77 and Human Rights in Czechoslovakia. London: Allen & Unwin, 1981.Google Scholar
Trumpener, Katie. “Peoples Without History and the Narratives of Nationalism.” Diss., University of Chicago, 1990. [Section on Gypsies.]Google Scholar
Turgeon, Lynn, “Discrimination against and Affirmative Action for Gypsies in Eastern Europe.” Ed. Michael L. Wyzan, The Political Economy of Ethnic Discrimination and Affirmative Action: A Comparative Perspective. New York: Praeger, 1990, pp. 155165.Google Scholar
Ulč, Otto. “Communist National Minority Policy: The Case of the Gypsies in Czechoslovakia.” Soviet Studies 20 (1969), 421443. Reprinted in Majority and Minority: The Dynamics of Racial and Ethnic Relations, eds. Norman R. Yetman and C. Hoy Steele, 106-11. 2nd ed. Boston: Allyn & Bacon, 1975.Google Scholar
Ulc”, Otto. “Gypsies in Czechoslovakia: A Case of Unfinished Integration.” Eastern European Politics and Societies 2:2 (1988), 306333.Google Scholar
Wiklund, D. Council of Europe Report on the Position of Gypsies in Member States. Strasbourg: Council of Europe, 1969.Google Scholar
Wolfrum, Rüdiger. “The Legal Status of Sinti and Roma in Europe: A Case Study Concerning the Shortcomings of the Protection of Minorities.” Annuaire Européen/European Yearbook 33 (1986), 7593.Google Scholar
Andersen, David M.Finnish Folk-Accounts for the Origins of the Gypsies.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 1:2 (1976), 7378.Google Scholar
Birnbaum, Mariana D.On the Language of Prejudice.” Western Folklore 30:4 (October 1971), 247268.Google Scholar
Dombrowski, Juri. “Zigeuner in der russischen Literatur.” Kunst und Literatur 32:4 (1984), 443453.Google Scholar
Görög-Karady, Veronika. “The Image of Gypsies in Hungarian Oral Literature.” New York Folklore 11:1-4 (1985), 149159.Google Scholar
Kalogjera, Damir. “Attitudes Toward Serbo-Croatian Language Varieties.” International Journal of the Sociology of Language 52 (1985), 93109.Google Scholar
Mirga, Andrzej. “Stereotyp jako model ‘prawdziwego swojego’ i ‘obcego’ (Próba konstrukcji teoretycznej zjawiska stereotypu)” [Stereotype as a Model of “One's Own” and “An Outsider” (An Attempt at Theoretical Construction of a Stereotype)]. Zeszyty Naukowe Uniwersytetu Jagiellonskiego, Prace etnograficzne 19 (1984), 5170.Google Scholar
Mirga, Andrzej. “Krajobraz Wiejski z Cyganami: Z Badan nad Stereotypem Cyganów w Polsce [Landscape with Gypsies: Studies on the Gypsy Stereotype in Poland].” Prace Etnograficzne 24 (1989), 97123. [In Polish, with English summary.]Google Scholar
Bubelini, Jan, Rusnak, Alojz, and Kamensky, Ivan. “Niektore otazky efektivnosti letnych rekreacno-vychovnych taborov pre ciganske deti” [Problems with the Effectiveness of Summer Recreational-Educational Camps for Gypsy Children]. Jednotna Skola 37:4 (April 1985), 341356. [Discusses the role of summer camps for Gypsies in eastern Slovakia.]Google Scholar
Martins-Heuss, Kirsten. “Reflections on the Collective Identity of German Roma and Sinti (Gypsies) After National Socialism.” Holocaust and Genocide Studies 4:2 (1989), 193211.Google Scholar
Gilberg, Trond. “Ethnic Minorities in Romania under Socialism.” East European Quarterly 7:4 (January 1974), 435458.Google Scholar
Gilberg, Trond. “Ethnic Minorities in Romania under Socialism.” East European Quarterly 7:4 (January 1974), 435458. Grönfors, Martti. Ethnic Minorities and Deviance: The Relationship between Finnish Gypsies and the Police. University of Helsinki Sociology of Law Series No. 1, 1979.Google Scholar
Grönfors, Martti. “Police Perception of Social Problems and Clients: The Case of the Gypsies in Finland.” International Journal of the Sociology of Law 9:4 (November 1981), 345359.Google Scholar
Hübschmannová, Milena. “Economic Stratification and Interaction: Roma, an Ethnic Jati in East Slovakia.” Giessener Hefte für Tsiganologie 3-4 (1984), 328.Google Scholar
Zywert, Jozefat. “Poglady Cyganow na Atrakcyjnosc” [Gypsies’ Views of the Attractiveness of Certain Professions]. Studia Socjologiczne 40:1 (1971), 211222.Google Scholar
Bock, Gisela. “Aber ich wolte vorher noch ein Kind.” Courage 6 (May 1981), 2124.Google Scholar
Bock, Gisela. “Racism and Sexism in Nazi Germany: Motherhood, Compulsory Sterilization and the State.” Signs 8:3 (1983), 400421.Google Scholar
Vukanovic, T. P.The Position of Women Among Gypsies in the Kosovo-Metohija Region.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 40:3-4 (July-October 1961), 81100.Google Scholar
Etudes Tsiganes, Paris, 1955 Google Scholar
Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society, Edinburgh (etc.), 1888–1982 (with interruptions), Maryland, U.S.A., 1991 Google Scholar
Lacio Drom, Rome, 1964 Google Scholar
Roma, Chandigarh, 1974 Google Scholar
Traveller Education, England, 1972 Google Scholar
Andronik, I. M.Evolution of Dwellings of Russian Gypsies.” Soviet Anthropology and Archeology 6:1 (1972), 328.Google Scholar
Bartosz, Adam. “Carpathian Gypsies and the Rural Community.” Ethnologia Polona 7 (1981), 2733.Google Scholar
Erdös, Kamill. “Jottings on Gypsy Judicature in Hungary.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 40:1-2 (January-April 1961), 5660.Google Scholar
Erdös, Kamill. “A Classification of Gypsies in Hungary.” Acta Ethnographica 6:3-4 (1958), 513.Google Scholar
Kaminski, Ignacy-Marek. “Identity Conflicts: Gypsy-Romany.” Working Paper, Institute of Social Anthropology, No. 14, University of Gothenburg, 1977.Google Scholar
Kaminski, Ignacy-Marek. “The State of Ambiguity: Studies of Gypsy Refugees.” Gothenburg: University of Gothenburg, Department of Social Anthropology, 1980.Google Scholar
Kenrick, D.Notes on the Gypsies in Bulgaria.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 45:3-4 (July-October 1966), 7784.Google Scholar
Lockwood, William G. “Gypsies.” Ed. Richard V. Weekes, Muslim Peoples. Vol. 1. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1984, pp. 304308.Google Scholar
Lockwood, William G.East European Gypsies in Western Europe: The Social and Cultural Adaptation of the Xoraxané.” Nomadic Peoples 21/22 (December 1986), 6370.Google Scholar
Mohamed-Salih, Margaret. “The Position of Gypsies in Finnish Society.” Diss., University of Manchester, 1985.Google Scholar
Nazarov, Kh. Kh. “Contemporary Ethnic Development of the Central Asian Gypsies (Liuli).” Soviet Anthropology and Archeology 21:3 (Winter 1982-1983), 328.Google Scholar
Sanarov, V. J.The Siberian Gypsies.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 49:3-4 (July-October 1970), 126137.Google Scholar
Silverman, Carol. “Bulgarian Gypsies: Adaptation in a Socialist Context.” Nomadic Peoples 21/22 (December 1986), 5162.Google Scholar
Stewart, Michael Sinclair. “Brothers in Song: The Persistence of (Vlach) Gypsy Identity and Community in Socialist Hungary.” Diss., London School of Economic and Political Science, 1987.Google Scholar
Stewart, Michael. “True Speech': Song and the Moral Order of a Hungarian Vlach Gypsy Community.” Man 24:1 (March 1989), 79102.Google Scholar
Vukanovic, T. P.The Manufacture of Pots and Pans Among the Gypsies of Kosovo and Metohija.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 40:1-2 (January-April 1961), 3544. [Economic adaptation]Google Scholar
Vukanovic, T. P.The Gypsy Population in Yugoslavia.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 42:1-2 (January-April 1963), 1027.Google Scholar
Alleaume, Armelle. “Les Tsiganes et la musique en Hongrie.” Ethnopsychologie 32:1 (1977), 6981.Google Scholar
Balász, János. A Hungarian Gypsy Artist. Budapest: CorvinaPress, 1977. New York: International Publications Service, 1977.Google Scholar
Courthiade, Marcel. “Jeunes poètes roms de Cassove.” Etudes Tsiganes 29:1 (1983), 29. [Rom poets from Kosovo, Yugoslavia.]Google Scholar
Cybulski, Mariusz. “Papusza and Her Poems.” Lacio Drom Supp. to 6 (December 1985), 21-31. [Six poems in English and Romani by Polish Gypsy poet Papusza (Bronis/awa Wajs), born in 1909.]Google Scholar
Dunin, Elsie. “Gypsy Wedding (in Skopje): Dance and Customs.” Midwest Folklore 4:7-8 (1971), 317326.Google Scholar
Garfias, Robert. “Dance Among the Urban Gypsies of Romania.” Yearbook for Traditional Music 16 (1984), 8496.Google Scholar
Hübschmannová, Milena. “Roma (Gypsies) in Czechoslovakia and Their Literature.” Studies in Indo-Asian Art and Culture 5 (1978), 3776.Google Scholar
Kovalcsik, Katalin. Vlach Gypsy Folk Songs in Slovakia. Budapest: Institute for Musicology in the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 1985.Google Scholar
Lakatos, Menyhért. “Artisti zingari autodidatti in Ungheria.” Lacio Drom 17:3 (May-June 1981), 1415.Google Scholar
Manush, Leksa. “The Problem of the Folk Music of the Gypsies: Sources of Gypsy Music in Europe.” Soviet Anthropology and Archeology 25:3 (1986–1987), 17-34. [Extensive bibliography incorporated in footnotes.] Martin, György. Hungarian Folk Dances. Budapest: Corvina, 1974. Rice, Timothy. “The Surla and Tapan Tradition in Yugoslav Macedonia.”Google Scholar
Galpin Society Journal 35:3 (1982), 122137.Google Scholar
Romanov, Manuš. 17 purane Rromane gila andar-i Bälgaria. Tarnov: Phralipe, 1990.Google Scholar
Salijesor, Seljajdin. Dživdipe maskar-o Rroma: Poemi. Preseva: Grafoflux, 1988.Google Scholar
Sárosi, Bálint. Gypsy Music. Budapest: Corvina Press, 1978.Google Scholar
Simic, Andrei. “Sevdah: The Ritual Containment of Machismo in the Balkans.” UCLA Journal of Dance Ethnology 3 (Spring 1979), 2636.Google Scholar
Vidic, Ljerka. “The Musical Practice of the Nomadic Rom in Bosnia and Hercegovina.” M.A. Thesis, Wesleyan University, 1987.Google Scholar
Vig, Rudolf. “Gipsy Folk Songs from the Béla Bartók and Zoltán Kodály Collections.” Studia Musicologica 16:1-4 (1974), 89131.Google Scholar
Vukanovic, T. P.Musical Culture Among the Gypsies of Yugoslavia.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 41:1-2 (January-April 1962), 4161.Google Scholar
Beckers, Jan. Me hum Sinthu: Ikben zigeuner: Gesprekkenmetzigeuners over de vervolging in de periode ‘40-45 en de jaren daarna. Den Haag: Horus, 1980.Google Scholar
Braun, Hans. “A Sinto Survivor Speaks.” Papers from the Sixth and Seventh Annual Meetings, Gypsy Lore Society, North American Chapter, ed. Grumet, Joanne. New York: GLSNA, 1986, pp. 165171.Google Scholar
Cioaba, Joan. “Il genocidio in Romania: una testimonianza.” Lacio Drom 20:2-3 (March-June 1984), 5456.Google Scholar
Heger, Heinz. “The Polish Boys and the Gypsy Capo.” The Men With the Pink Triangle. Trans. David Fernbach. London: Gay Men's Press, 1980; Boston: Alyson Publications, 1980, pp. 5766.Google Scholar
Kochanowski, Jan. “Maskir Romende (Among Gypsies): The Views of a Latvian Gypsy.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 44:3-4 (July-October 1965), 137140.Google Scholar
Levak, Zlato. “La persecuzione degli Zingari: una testimonianza.” Lacio Drom 12:3 (May-June 1976), 23.Google Scholar
Levi, Primo. “(Tra le baracche di Auschwitz) Lo zingaro.” Lacio Drom 17:6 (November-December 1981), 2629.Google Scholar
Nomberg-Przytyk, Sara. “The Little Gypsy,” Auschwitz: True Tales from a Grotesque Land. Chapel Hill and London: University of North Carolina Press, 1985, pp. 8384.Google Scholar
Plotkin, Diane. “The Story of Leo Laufer of Birkenau,” in “Historiographic Analysis of a Survivor's Narrative,” Diss., U. Texas Arlington, 1989.Google Scholar
Stojka, Ceija. Wir leben im Verborgenen: Erinnerungen einer Rom-Zigeunerin. Vienna: Picus, 1988. [Autobiography of a Gypsy survivor of Auschwitz]Google Scholar
Vexler, Yancou. “J'étais médecin des Tsiganes à Auschwitz.” Monde Gitan 27 (1973), 110.Google Scholar
Zubák, Čiriklo Luboš. “Čačikane ačhibena/Storie accadute.” Lacio Drom 3:21 (May-June 1985), 25. [A Czech Gypsy's account of the racism he has encountered.]Google Scholar
Acton, Thomas. “Using the Gypsies’ Own Language: Two Contrasting Approaches in Hungarian Schools.” Traveller Education 22 (1987), 1115.Google Scholar
Csapo, Marg. “Teaching Gypsy Children in Hungarian Schools.” B.C. [British Columbia] Journal of Special Education 4:3 (Fall 1980), 283289.Google Scholar
Csapo, Marg. “Concerns Related to the Education of Romany Students in Hungary, Austria and Finland.” Comparative Education 18:2 (1982), 205219.Google Scholar
Rebernak, Nives. “Pismenost’ i obrazovanost’ romskogo stanovnistva” [The Literacy and Education of the Gypsy Population]. Sociologija-sela 23 (1985), 8790, 155-68. [“Empirical data from 231 Gypsies in Yugoslavia reveal that many have had no formal schooling, yet have nonetheless learned to read and write to a limited extent.”]Google Scholar
Varnagy, Elemer. The Education of Gypsy Children. Pecs: University of Pecs: School of Education, 1987.Google Scholar
Hübschmannová, Milena. “Oral Folklore of Slovak Roms.” Lacio Drom Supp. to 6 (December 1985), 6170.Google Scholar
Kenrick, Donald. “The Oral Tradition Among the Romanies in Bulgaria.” Lacio Drom Supp. to 6 (December 1985), 7782.Google Scholar
Nagy, Olga. “The Persistence of Archaic Traits Among Gypsy Story-Telling Communities in Romania.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 1:4 (1978), 221239.Google Scholar
Necas, Ctibor. “K socialni adaptaci Cikanu na Straznicku.” Narodopisne Aktuality 19:1 (1982), 2532.Google Scholar
Rice, Timothy. “A Macedonian Sobor: Anatomy of a Celebration.” Journal of American Folklore 93:368 (1980), 113128.Google Scholar
Tong, Diane. “Aspects of Narrative Tradition in a Greek Gypsy Community.” Lacio Drom Supp. to 6 (December 1985), 8390.Google Scholar
Tong, Diane. Gypsy Folktales. San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1989. [Includes 38 stories from the countries covered here.]Google Scholar
Vekerdi, Jozsef. “The Gypsy's Role in the Preservation of Non-Gypsy Folklore.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 1:2 (1979), 7986.Google Scholar
Mróz, Lech. “Jerzy Ficowski and Other Gypsiologists in Poland.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 47:3-4 (July-October 1968), 134141.Google Scholar
Ackovic, Dragoljub. “Suffering of Romas in Yugoslavia in Second World War.” Giessener Hefte für Tsiganologie 3:1-4 (1986), 128132.Google Scholar
Ayass, Wolfgang, Gilsenbach, Reimar, Körber, Ursula, Scherer, Klaus, Wagner, Patrick, and Winter, Matthias. Feinderklärung und Prävention: Kriminalbiologie, Zigeunerforschung und Asozialenpolitik. Berlin: Rotbuch Verlag, 1988.Google Scholar
Bernadac, Christian. L'Holocauste oublié: le massacre des Tsiganes. Paris: Editions France-Empire, 1979.Google Scholar
Brucker-Boroujerdi, Ute, and Wipperman, W.Das Zigeunerlager Berlin-Marzahn, 1936–1945.” Pogrom 130 (1978), 7780.Google Scholar
Cargas, Harry James. “The Continuum of Gypsy Suffering,” Reflections of a Post-Auschwitz Christian. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1989, pp. 7590.Google Scholar
Colinon, Maurice. “Le martyre gitan sous le nazisme.” Monde Gitan 4 (1967), 14.Google Scholar
Crowe, David. “Minorities in Hungary since 1948.” Nationalities Papers 17:1 (Fall 1989), 2235.Google Scholar
Crowe, David, and Kolsti, John, eds. The Gypsies of Eastern Europe. Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe, 1991.Google Scholar
Davidová, Eva. “The Gypsies in Czechoslovakia.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society, 49:3-4 (July-October 1970), 84-97; 50:12 (January-April 1971), 4054.Google Scholar
Dobroszycki, Lucjan, ed. The Chronicle of the Łódż Ghetto, 1941–1944. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1984.Google Scholar
Ficowski, Jerzy. “The Fate of Polish Gypsies.” Genocide and Human Rights: A Global Anthology. Ed. Jack Nusan Porter. Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1982, pp. 166177.Google Scholar
Ficowski, Jerzy. Gypsies in Poland: History and Customs. Warsaw: Interpress Publishers, 1989.Google Scholar
Friedman, Philip. “The Extermination of the Gypsies.” Jewish Frontier (1951), 11-14. Reprinted in Porter, Jack Nusan, Genocide and Human Rights . Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1982, pp. 151157.Google Scholar
Gheorghe, Nicolae. “Origin of Romas’ Slavery in the Rumanian Principalities.” Roma 7:1 (1983), 1227.Google Scholar
Hancock, Ian. The Pariah Syndrome. Ann Arbor: Karoma, 1987.Google Scholar
Hancock, Ian. “Amare Rroma ande o porrajmos.” Paper presented at the International Congress of the Rom and Cinti Union, Mülheim-Ruhr, November 1-4, 1990. To appear in the Proceedings. [On Roma in the Holocaust.]Google Scholar
Kabat, Ladislas. “Le Massacre des Tsiganes en Pologne.” Monde Gitan 33 (1975), 1114.Google Scholar
Kalisch, Shoshana with Barbara Meister. Yes, We Sang! Songs of the Ghettos and Concentration Camps. New York: Harper & Row, 1985.Google Scholar
Karpati, Mirella. “Il Genocidio degli Zingari.” Lacio Drom 23 (January-February 1987), 1634.Google Scholar
Karpati, Mirella, et al. “I crimini contro l'umanità in Polonia e in Europa 1939–1945.” Lacio Drom 20:2-3 (March-June 1984), 3-47. [“Translation of papers concerning persecution and extermination of Gypsies, read at a meeting organized by the Commission of Inquiry into Nazi crimes, Polish Ministry of Justice, held April 14-17, 1983. Contributions by Lech Mroz, Jacek Wilczur, Stanislaw Zabierowski, Cezary Jablonski, Donald Kenrick, and Mirella Karpati.”]Google Scholar
Kenrick, Donald and Puxon, Grattan. The Destiny of Europe's Gypsies. New York: Basic Books, 1972.Google Scholar
Kenrick, Donald and Puxon, Grattan. “Letter to the Editor” [Addenda to The Destiny of Europe's Gypsies]. Holocaust and Genocide Studies 4:2 (1989), 251254.Google Scholar
King, Christine E.Some Lesser-Known Victims of Totalitarian Persecution.” Patterns of Prejudice 16:2 (1982), 1526.Google Scholar
Kogon, Eugen. The Theory and Practice of Hell: The German Concentration Camps and the System Behind Them. Trans. Heinz Norden. New York: Berkley, 1950.Google Scholar
Lassère, Juliette. “Les gitans d'Autriche sous l'occupation nazi.” Monde Gitan 20 (1971), 2021.Google Scholar
Lifton, Robert Jay. The Nazi Doctors: Medical Killing and the Psychology of Genocide. New York: Basic Books, 1986.Google Scholar
Maximoff, Matéo. “Germany and the Gypsies: From the Gypsy's Point of View.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 25:3-4 (July-October 1946), 104108.Google Scholar
Müller-Hill, Benno. Murderous Science: Elimination by Scientific Selection of Jews, Gypsies, and Others, Germany 1933–1945. New York: Oxford University Press, 1988.Google Scholar
Nečas, Ctibor. “The Czech Gypsies During the Nazi Occupation.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 2:1 (1982), 6975.Google Scholar
Noakes, Jeremy. “Social Outcasts in Nazi Germany.” History Today 35 (December 1985), 1519.Google Scholar
Novitch, Myriam. “Half a Million Gypsies Victims of the Nazi Terror.” UNESCO Courier (October 1984), 2425.Google Scholar
Proctor, Robert. Racial Hygiene: Medicine Under the Nazis. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1988.Google Scholar
Puxon, Grattan and Kenrick, Donald. Bibahtale berša. London: Romanestan Publications, 1990. [Romani-language translation of the authors’ Destiny of Europe's Gypsies—see above under Kenrick.]Google Scholar
Schechtman, Joseph B.The Gypsy Problem.” Midstream 12:9 (November 1966), 5260.Google Scholar
Sigot, Jacques. “La dernière guerre et les campes des nomades.” Etudes Tsiganes 3 (1987), 2938.Google Scholar
Soulis, George C.The Gypsies in the Byzantine Empire and the Balkans in the Late Middle Ages.” Dumbarton Oaks Papers 15 (1961), 141165.Google Scholar
Szymanski, Tadeusz. “The ‘Hospital’ in the Family Camp for Gypsies at Auschwitz-Birkenau.” Przeglad Szymanski 2:2 (1971), 145.Google Scholar
Tillion, Germaine. Ravensbrück. Trans. Gerald Satterwhite. Garden City, NY: Doubleday/Anchor, 1975.Google Scholar
Trials of War Criminals before the Nuernberg Military Tribunals. Superintendent of Documents, Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1949. [Section on Gypsies in Volume 4.]Google Scholar
Tyrnauer, Gabrielle. “The Fate of the Gypsies during the Holocaust.” Washington: U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council Special Report, 1985.Google Scholar
Wiesenthal, Simon. “The Extermination of the Gypsies,” The Murderers Among Us: The Simon Wiesenthal Memoirs. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1967, pp. 238242.Google Scholar
Wiesenthal, Simon. “Jews and Gypsies,” Justice, Not Vengeance. New York: Grove Weidenfeld, 1989, pp. 219223.Google Scholar
Wytwycky, Bohdan. The Other Holocaust: Many Circles of Hell. Washington, D.C.: The Novak Report, 1980.Google Scholar
Zülch, Tilman, ed. In Auschwitz vergast, bis heute verfolgt: zur Situation der Roma (Zigeuner) in Deutschland und Europa. Hamburg: Rowohlt, 1979.Google Scholar
Ariste, Paul. “On Two Intonations in a Romany Dialect.” Estonian Papers in Phonetics (1978), 57.Google Scholar
Calvet, Georges. Lexique Tsigane: Dialecte des Erlides de Sofia. Paris: Publications Orientalistes de France, 1982.Google Scholar
Cortiade, Marcel. “E lavenqe save nane an-i chib Romani.” Ed. Patrick Williams, Tsiganes: Identité, évolution. Paris: Syros, 1989, pp. 386394. [On augmenting the contemporary Romani lexicon.]Google Scholar
Cortiade, Marcel. Xaca dume: But godi. Tirana: National Printing Office, 1990. [A study of Romani syntax through an examination of its proverbs.]Google Scholar
Friedman, Victor A.Balkan Romani Modality and Other Balkan Languages.” Folia Slavica 7:3 (1985), 381389.Google Scholar
Haarmann, Harald. Spracherhaltung und Sprachwechsel als Probleme der interlingualen Soziolinguistik: Studien zur Gruppenmehrsprachigkeit der Zigeuner in der Sowjetunion. Hamburg: Helmut Buske, 1980.Google Scholar
Heinschink, Mozes. “La langue tsigane parlée en Autriche et en Yougoslavie.” Etudes Tsiganes 24 (1978), 820.Google Scholar
Hübschmannová-, Milena. “Bilingualism Among the Slovak Rom.” International Journal of the Sociology of Language 19 (1979), 3349.Google Scholar
Igla, Birgit. “Das Romani von Ajia Varvara: Deskriptive und Historische-Vergleichende Darstellung eines Zigeuner Dialekts.” Diss., Ruhr University, Bochum, Germany, 1989.Google Scholar
Jusuf, Saip. Romani Gramatika. Skopje: Nasha Kniga, 1980. [Grammar of Romani written in Romani.]Google Scholar
Kenrick, Donald. “The Romani Dialect of a Musician from Razgrad.” Linguistique Balkanique (Sofia) 11:2 (1967), 7178.Google Scholar
Kenrick, Donald. “Morphology and Lexicon of the Romany Dialect of Kotel, Bulgaria.” Diss., University of London, 1969.Google Scholar
Kochanowski, Jan. Gypsy Studies. 2 vols. New Delhi: International Academy of Indian Culture, 1963. [2nd volume is a collection of folktales in the author's Latvian Romani dialect.]Google Scholar
Kostov, Kiril. “Aus der Syntax der Zigeunersprache Bulgariens.” Linguistique Balkanique 4 (1962), 131146.Google Scholar
Kostov, Kiril. “Zur Bedeutung des Zigeunerischen für die Erforschung grammatischer Interferenzerscheinungen.” Linguistique Balkanique 16:2 (1973), 99113.Google Scholar
Lípa, Jiři. “Cases of Coexistence of Two Varieties of Romani in the Same Territory in Slovakia.” International Journal of the Sociology of Language 19 (1979), 5157.Google Scholar
McDaniel, Dana S.Conditions on WH-Chains.” Diss., The Graduate Center of the City University of New York, 1986. [Contains an extensive grammatical discussion of Pristina-Skopje Romani.]Google Scholar
Messing, Gordon M. A Greek Romany Glossary: As Spoken in Agia Varvara (Athens). Columbus, OH: Slavica, 1988.Google Scholar
Pobozniak, T. Grammar of the Lovari Dialect. Krakow: PolskaAkademia Nauk, 1963.Google Scholar
Puxon, Grattan. “Romanès and Language Policy in Jugoslavia.” International Journal of the Sociology of Language 19 (1979), 8390.Google Scholar
Réger, Zita. “Bilingual Gypsy Children in Hungary: Explorations in ‘Natural’ Second-Language Acquisition at an Early Age.” International Journal of the Sociology of Language 19 (1979), 5982.Google Scholar
Réger, Zita. “Language Groups Among the Gypsies in Hungary and Some Aspects of Their Oral Culture.” The Less Widely Taught Languages of Europe. Dublin: IRAAL, 1988.Google Scholar
Sapoval, Viktor. “Les emprunts nominaux et les emprunts verbaux slaves dans la langue tsigane.” Balkansko Ezikoznanie/Linguistique Balkanique 27:1 (1984), 6162.Google Scholar
Tong, Diane. “Language Use and Attitudes Among the Gypsies of Thessaloniki.” Anthropological Linguistics 25 (1983), 375385.Google Scholar
Tong, Diane. “Romani as Symbol: Sociolinguistic Strategies of the Gypsies of Thessaloniki.” Papers from the Fourth and Fifth Annual Meetings, Gypsy Lore Society, North American Chapter, ed. Grumet, Joanne. New York: GLSNA, 1985, pp. 179187.Google Scholar
Valtonen, Pertti. “Trends in Finnish Romani.” International Journal of the Sociology of Language 19 (1979), 121124.Google Scholar
Ventzel, R. V. Trans. S. S. Gitman. The Gypsy Language. Moscow: Nauka, 1983.Google Scholar
Acton, Thomas. “Meetings of the Social and War Crimes Commissions of the World Romani Congress. April 25-29, 1972. A Summary Report.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 51:3-4 (July-October 1972), 96101.Google Scholar
Beck, Sam. “Ethnicity, Class and Public Policy: Tsigani-Gypsies in Socialist Romnia.” Giessener Hefte für Tsiganologie 3:1-4 (1986), 109127.Google Scholar
Davidova, E. and Guy, D. E. “Czechoslovakia and Her Gypsies.” Ed. Thomas Acton, Current Changes Among British Gypsies and Their Place in International Patterns of Development. Oxford: Romanestan, 1971, pp. 7881.Google Scholar
Gheorghe, Nicolae, and Hancock, Ian. “Report of the International Romani Union on the Current Situation of Roma Throughout the World.” Manchaca, TX: International World Romani Union (USA), 1991. [Emphasis on human-rights violations in Romania.]Google Scholar
Gronemeyer, Reimer, ed. Eigensinn und Hilfe: Zigeuner in der Sozialpolitik heutiger Leistungsgesellschaften. Giessen: Focus, 1983.Google Scholar
Guy, Willy. “Ways of Looking at Roms: The Case of Czechoslovakia.” Ed. Farnham Rehfisch, Gypsies, Tinkers and other Travellers. London: Academic Press, 1975, pp. 201229.Google Scholar
Guy, Willy. “The Attempt of Socialist Czechoslovakia to Assimilate Its Gypsy Population.” Diss., University of Bristol, 1977.Google Scholar
Watch, Helsinki. Destroying Ethnic Identity: The Gypsies of Bulgaria. A Helsinki Watch Report. [Written by Theodore Zang, Jr.] New York and Washington: June 1991.Google Scholar
Watch, Helsinki. Destroying Ethnic Identity: The Persecution of Gypsies in Romania. A Helsinki Watch Report. [Written by Holly Cartner.] New York and Washington: September 1991.Google Scholar
Ionescu, Dan. “The Gypsies Organise.” Report on Eastern Europe 1:26 (June 29, 1990), 3944.Google Scholar
Join-Lambert, Pierre. “Discriminations raciales et Tsiganes.” Revue des Droits de l'Homme 5:1 (1972), 143173.Google Scholar
Kawczynski, Rudko. “E beda le Romenge ande e akanutni Evropa.” Paper circulated at the International Congress of Rom and Cinti Union, Mülheim-Ruhr, November 1-4, 1990. To appear in the Proceedings. [Discussion of current social and political problems facing Roma in contemporary Europe.]Google Scholar
Kenrick, D. S. “The World Romani Congress.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society (July-October 1971), 101108.Google Scholar
Kostelancik, David J.The Gypsies of Czechoslovakia: Political and Ideological Considerations in the Development of Policy.” Studies in Comparative Communism 22:4 (Winter 1989), 307321.Google Scholar
Marcus, Naomi. “On the Job … in the U.S.S.R.Columbia Journalism Review 27:1 (May/June 1988), 4850.Google Scholar
Matras, Yaron and Hancock, Ian. “Rezoluciji e EUROM-eske.” Hamburg: The Rom and Cinti Union, 1990. [Resolutions of the European Romani Parliament and description of its functions.]Google Scholar
Mirga, Andrzej. “Me Som Rom, Tumen San Gadzé.” Etnografia Polska 22:2 (1978), 177183.Google Scholar
Oliner, Samuel P. and Hallum, Ken. “Minority Contempt for Oppressors: A Comparative Analysis of Jews and Gypsies.” California Sociologist 1:1 (Winter 1978), 4157.Google Scholar
Partos, Ferenc. “A cigany es nem cigany lakossag velemenye a fobb tarsadalompolitikai celkituzesekrol” [Survey Opinions of Gypsies and Non-Gypsies on Major Sociopolitical Goals in Hungary]. Szociologia 1 (1980), 117.Google Scholar
Pavel, Dan. Trans. Juliana Geran Pilon. “Wanderers: Romania's Hidden Victims.” The New Republic (March 4, 1991), 1213.Google Scholar
Puxon, Grattan. “Gypsies and the Czech Crisis.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 48:1-2 (January-April 1969), 5759.Google Scholar
Puxon, Grattan. “RomainMacedonia.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 1:2 (1976), 128132.Google Scholar
Puxon, Grattan. “Gypsies: Blacks of East Europe.” Nation (April 17, 1976), 460464.Google Scholar
Radio Free Europe—Radio Liberty. “Stereotypes Projected to Jews, Blacks and Gypsies by East Europeans and Austrians.” Radio Free Europe—Radio Liberty, 1980.Google Scholar
Schonfeld, Roland, ed. Nationalitätenprobleme in Südosteuropa. Vienna: Oldenbourg, 1987. [Contains discussion of Hungarian government policies toward Gypsies.]Google Scholar
Seewann, Gerhard. “Zigeuner in Ungarn.” Zeitschrift f r Gegenwartsforschung 36:1 (1987), 1932.Google Scholar
Seybold, Katrin and Rosenberg, B.Zusammenhalt ist etwas kostbares.” Courage 6 (May 1981), 1719.Google Scholar
Skilling, H. Gordon. Charter 77 and Human Rights in Czechoslovakia. London: Allen & Unwin, 1981.Google Scholar
Trumpener, Katie. “Peoples Without History and the Narratives of Nationalism.” Diss., University of Chicago, 1990. [Section on Gypsies.]Google Scholar
Turgeon, Lynn, “Discrimination against and Affirmative Action for Gypsies in Eastern Europe.” Ed. Michael L. Wyzan, The Political Economy of Ethnic Discrimination and Affirmative Action: A Comparative Perspective. New York: Praeger, 1990, pp. 155165.Google Scholar
Ulč, Otto. “Communist National Minority Policy: The Case of the Gypsies in Czechoslovakia.” Soviet Studies 20 (1969), 421443. Reprinted in Majority and Minority: The Dynamics of Racial and Ethnic Relations, eds. Norman R. Yetman and C. Hoy Steele, 106-11. 2nd ed. Boston: Allyn & Bacon, 1975.Google Scholar
Ulc”, Otto. “Gypsies in Czechoslovakia: A Case of Unfinished Integration.” Eastern European Politics and Societies 2:2 (1988), 306333.Google Scholar
Wiklund, D. Council of Europe Report on the Position of Gypsies in Member States. Strasbourg: Council of Europe, 1969.Google Scholar
Wolfrum, Rüdiger. “The Legal Status of Sinti and Roma in Europe: A Case Study Concerning the Shortcomings of the Protection of Minorities.” Annuaire Européen/European Yearbook 33 (1986), 7593.Google Scholar
Andersen, David M.Finnish Folk-Accounts for the Origins of the Gypsies.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 1:2 (1976), 7378.Google Scholar
Birnbaum, Mariana D.On the Language of Prejudice.” Western Folklore 30:4 (October 1971), 247268.Google Scholar
Dombrowski, Juri. “Zigeuner in der russischen Literatur.” Kunst und Literatur 32:4 (1984), 443453.Google Scholar
Görög-Karady, Veronika. “The Image of Gypsies in Hungarian Oral Literature.” New York Folklore 11:1-4 (1985), 149159.Google Scholar
Kalogjera, Damir. “Attitudes Toward Serbo-Croatian Language Varieties.” International Journal of the Sociology of Language 52 (1985), 93109.Google Scholar
Mirga, Andrzej. “Stereotyp jako model ‘prawdziwego swojego’ i ‘obcego’ (Próba konstrukcji teoretycznej zjawiska stereotypu)” [Stereotype as a Model of “One's Own” and “An Outsider” (An Attempt at Theoretical Construction of a Stereotype)]. Zeszyty Naukowe Uniwersytetu Jagiellonskiego, Prace etnograficzne 19 (1984), 5170.Google Scholar
Mirga, Andrzej. “Krajobraz Wiejski z Cyganami: Z Badan nad Stereotypem Cyganów w Polsce [Landscape with Gypsies: Studies on the Gypsy Stereotype in Poland].” Prace Etnograficzne 24 (1989), 97123. [In Polish, with English summary.]Google Scholar
Bubelini, Jan, Rusnak, Alojz, and Kamensky, Ivan. “Niektore otazky efektivnosti letnych rekreacno-vychovnych taborov pre ciganske deti” [Problems with the Effectiveness of Summer Recreational-Educational Camps for Gypsy Children]. Jednotna Skola 37:4 (April 1985), 341356. [Discusses the role of summer camps for Gypsies in eastern Slovakia.]Google Scholar
Martins-Heuss, Kirsten. “Reflections on the Collective Identity of German Roma and Sinti (Gypsies) After National Socialism.” Holocaust and Genocide Studies 4:2 (1989), 193211.Google Scholar
Gilberg, Trond. “Ethnic Minorities in Romania under Socialism.” East European Quarterly 7:4 (January 1974), 435458.Google Scholar
Gilberg, Trond. “Ethnic Minorities in Romania under Socialism.” East European Quarterly 7:4 (January 1974), 435458. Grönfors, Martti. Ethnic Minorities and Deviance: The Relationship between Finnish Gypsies and the Police. University of Helsinki Sociology of Law Series No. 1, 1979.Google Scholar
Grönfors, Martti. “Police Perception of Social Problems and Clients: The Case of the Gypsies in Finland.” International Journal of the Sociology of Law 9:4 (November 1981), 345359.Google Scholar
Hübschmannová, Milena. “Economic Stratification and Interaction: Roma, an Ethnic Jati in East Slovakia.” Giessener Hefte für Tsiganologie 3-4 (1984), 328.Google Scholar
Zywert, Jozefat. “Poglady Cyganow na Atrakcyjnosc” [Gypsies’ Views of the Attractiveness of Certain Professions]. Studia Socjologiczne 40:1 (1971), 211222.Google Scholar
Bock, Gisela. “Aber ich wolte vorher noch ein Kind.” Courage 6 (May 1981), 2124.Google Scholar
Bock, Gisela. “Racism and Sexism in Nazi Germany: Motherhood, Compulsory Sterilization and the State.” Signs 8:3 (1983), 400421.Google Scholar
Vukanovic, T. P.The Position of Women Among Gypsies in the Kosovo-Metohija Region.” Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 40:3-4 (July-October 1961), 81100.Google Scholar