Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Note on Transliteration
- Chapter 1 Introduction
- Chapter 2 Rural—Urban Relations in a Global Age
- Chapter 3 Every Village, a Different Story: Tracking Rural Diversity in Bulgaria
- Chapter 4 Smugglers into Millionaires: Marginality and Shifting Cultural Hierarchies in a Bulgarian Border Town
- Chapter 5 Rural Decline as the Epilogue to Communist Modernization: The Case of a Socialist ‘Model’ Village
- Chapter 6 No Wealth without Networks and Personal Trust: New Capitalist Agrarian Entrepreneurs in the Dobrudzha
- Chapter 7 Inheritance after Restitution: Modern Legislative Norms and Customary Practices in Rural Bulgaria
- Chapter 8 Rural, Urban and Rurban: Everyday Perceptions and Practices
- Chapter 9 The Koprivshtitsa Festival: From National Icon to Globalized Village Event
- Chapter 10 Fashioning Markets: Brand Geographies in Bulgaria
- Chapter 11 Greek (Ad)ventures in Sofia: Economic Elite Mobility and New Cultural Hierarchies at the Margins of Europe
- List of Contributors
Chapter 4 - Smugglers into Millionaires: Marginality and Shifting Cultural Hierarchies in a Bulgarian Border Town
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2014
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Note on Transliteration
- Chapter 1 Introduction
- Chapter 2 Rural—Urban Relations in a Global Age
- Chapter 3 Every Village, a Different Story: Tracking Rural Diversity in Bulgaria
- Chapter 4 Smugglers into Millionaires: Marginality and Shifting Cultural Hierarchies in a Bulgarian Border Town
- Chapter 5 Rural Decline as the Epilogue to Communist Modernization: The Case of a Socialist ‘Model’ Village
- Chapter 6 No Wealth without Networks and Personal Trust: New Capitalist Agrarian Entrepreneurs in the Dobrudzha
- Chapter 7 Inheritance after Restitution: Modern Legislative Norms and Customary Practices in Rural Bulgaria
- Chapter 8 Rural, Urban and Rurban: Everyday Perceptions and Practices
- Chapter 9 The Koprivshtitsa Festival: From National Icon to Globalized Village Event
- Chapter 10 Fashioning Markets: Brand Geographies in Bulgaria
- Chapter 11 Greek (Ad)ventures in Sofia: Economic Elite Mobility and New Cultural Hierarchies at the Margins of Europe
- List of Contributors
Summary
Tran is a small town located at the Bulgarian—Serbian border that blends a certain pride of its ‘urban’ status and past with ‘rural’ appearances and ways of life. Its border location has impacted hugely on its development and the mentality of its inhabitants, giving it an almost iconic ‘peripheral’ place in the Bulgarian national imaginary, unsuitable as a site for a ‘representative’ Bulgarian ethnography. Nevertheless, since the early 1990s. Tran has enjoyed increased ethnographic interest because of its growing reputation as a dynamic place, due to the numerous opportunities offered by transborder petty trade and smuggling. Around 1995, petrol stations mushroomed in all the villages located on the road from Tran to the border checkpoint Strezimirovtsi, while rumours spread about the emergence of local ‘millionaires’ who had become rich from smuggling petrol to Serbia, a country that was under international embargo at the time. Tran made headlines in the Bulgarian media, first because of the joint Bulgarian—US military exercise Cornerstone in the summer of 1998, and then for the blind bombs falling on Bulgarian territory during the 1999 bombing of Serbia. These events put Tran on the map, as well as on the map of an emerging global ethnography in which locality (or neighbourhood as ‘the actually existing social form of locality’, see Appadurai 1996, 178—9), relational and contextual as it is, has become an autonomous unit in a network of global flows, unmediated by the state, and transcending national borders (187).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Global VillagesRural and Urban Transformations in Contemporary Bulgaria, pp. 67 - 88Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2013