The Roma: A Travelling History
By (Author) Madeline Potter
Vintage Publishing
The Bodley Head Ltd
22nd June 2025
22nd May 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Memoirs
Social and cultural history
Social groups: religious groups and communities
Social groups: alternative lifestyles
Ethnic groups and multicultural studies
Social and cultural anthropology
Social discrimination and social justice
Violence, intolerance and persecution in history
Travel writing
305.891497
Hardback
272
Width 156mm, Height 240mm, Spine 28mm
500g
Blending meditative personal memoir, lyrical travel writing and absorbing history, The Roma brings to light the forgotten history of Romani communities throughout Europe from the sixteenth century to the present day. The Roma is a profoundly personal portrait of a people and their on-going journey, shedding new light on their history and what it means to be Romani in Europe today. It is a history that is not widely known and understood, and that invisibility has created a space where fear and hostility continue to thrive. Full of fascinating stories and extraordinary individuals, The Roma is a powerful corrective to the stereotyping and prejudices still faced by Romani communities. We meet the Romani artist who chronicled her experiences of the Holocaust in Austria; the boxer who should have become Germany's light-heavyweight champion only to have his win scratched from the record by the Nazis; and a eighteenth-century Romani woman in London who was accused of kidnapping a girl and sentenced to death only to be exonerated thanks to some detective work by an unconvinced judge. Throughout, Madeline Potter weaves in her travels though contemporary Romani Europe as well as strands of her own journey as a Romani woman in Romania and now in Britain. Deftly blending explorative history and portraits of a unique and vibrant culture with intimate accounts of racism, The Roma is a celebration of survival - of resilience and resistance in the face of prejudice and persecution.
Madeline Potter was born in Romania in 1989 and grew up Romani in nineties post-Communist Romania. She now lives in Scotland and is a scholar of nineteenth-century literature at the University of Edinburgh, having earned her PhD from the University of York in 2020. Her academic monograph, THEOLOGICAL MONSTERS, will be published in 2024. THE ROMA- A TRAVELLING HISTORY is her first trade book.