Staging Citizenship should be considered required reading for anthropologists and media students working on minority identity in Eastern Europe and the Balkans today. Szeman manages to accommodate both readability and impressive detail into a relatively short book. Each thematic section empowers the reader with the tools to understand the next, and despite each chapter working as a self-contained study in its own right, the real strength of Staging Citizenship is in its ethnographic comprehensiveness. * Sudosteuropa
Staging Citizenship is a major contribution to studies of performance and belonging within subaltern communities that resonates far beyond the borders of Romania, as Roma in other post-communist and, in many cases, recently admitted EU member states in Eastern Europe likewise continue to experience gaps of actual citizenship. Szeman provides a powerful message about (the denial of) Romani rights; her findings are original, incisive and nuanced. * Feminist Review
The contribution of this book can be valuable for readers in different disciplines of the social sciences and humanities, in particular those interested in empirically-based cultural analyses of east European Roma or those willing to contemplate issues of the cultural recognition of subaltern populations on the ethicized, nationalized, and globalized cultural scenes through this analysis that uses the angle of performance studies. * Slavic Review
The book is written in an a clear and enjoyable prose, the concepts introduced are well chosen and enlighten the analytical work. * Jatek-Ter
Readers expecting to find 'colorful dancing Roma' might find this study disappointing at first. But those who follow Ioana Szeman's narrative-which encompasses fairs, dance performances, NGO training sessions, television programs, and an entire community inhabiting a garbage dump-will discover a much more nuanced, complex, and reality-based portrayal of Romani life. * Sonia Tamar Seeman, University of Texas, Austin
This book analyzes the social position and cultural representation of Roma in post-socialist Europe in a thoroughly original way. Few studies have so eloquently demonstrated 'why culture matters' in contemporary debates about exclusion, nationalism, and European minorities. * Huub van Baar, Justus Liebig University Giessen