Abstract

In the context of a tacit agreement, when “Stolipinovo” is mentioned in the public space, which in popular media discourse is considered to be the biggest urban ghetto on the Balkans, this quarter’s name inevitably starts a logical chain, dominated not only by pejorative associations, but also by a pervasive and artificially imposed stigma that puts all its inhabitants under a common banner—this is a “gypsy neighbourhood”. Departing from this common and widespread narrative, this paper, based on a long-term ethnographic study in the neighbourhood, will instead reconstruct it as a specific social space can be explained by taking into account its pluralistic and inhomogeneous nature and taking into account the dynamics of daily life within the neighbourhood, distinguished by its diversity and variability, but also by the distinctiveness of a particular model of “living together”.

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