Listen "Romani, Waste, and Race in Bulgaria"
Episode Synopsis
There’s a paradox at the center of Elana Resnick’s book, Refusing Sustainability: Race and Environmentalism in a Changing Europe. EU policies of environmental sustainability in Bulgaria require the racialization of Romani into a permanent low-skilled and impoverished workforce. Waste management required teams of Romani streetsweepers and trash collectors to sort trash into waste, recyclables and compost, and bring them for processing and reuse. This labor was historically filled by Bulgaria’s Romani citizens, to the point where white Bulgarians equated them with waste. And in turn, Roma’s racial otherness allowed white Bulgarians to enter a pan-European concept of whiteness. Since race is a favorite subject on the Eurasian Knot, Sean spoke to Elana about Sofia’s Romani women as waste workers, the powerful solidarity and collective action that emerges from their labor, and the implications for Romani rights struggle in Bulgaria.Guest:Elana Resnick is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Santa Barbara, where she also leads the Infrastructural Inequalities Research Group. She’s the author of several articles and the book, Refusing Sustainability: Race and Environmentalism in a Changing Europe, published by Stanford University Press.Send us your sounds! PatreonKnotty News Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
More episodes of the podcast The Eurasian Knot
Post-Soviet Graffiti
05/01/2026
The Stiliagi
15/12/2025
Fraternization and Survival During WWII
24/11/2025
The Art of War
17/11/2025
How Peat Electrified the USSR
27/10/2025
Murder Mystery in Moscow
20/10/2025
How Konigsberg Became Kaliningrad
13/10/2025
The Judeo-Bolshevik Myth
06/10/2025
Rebel Russia
22/09/2025
Russians in San Francisco
15/09/2025
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.