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greece

TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities

Recreating the music of an ancient Greek chorus: Euripides Orestes

Research into ancient music.
Faculty of Classics

Macedonian Lawgiver Kings and the Young: ΝΕΟΤΗΣ ΓΕΓΥΜΝΑΣΜΕΝΗ: The David Lewis Lecture 2016

The 2016 David Lewis Memorial Lecture, delivered by Professor Miltiades B. Hatzopoulos of the International Hellenic University. Introduced by Robert Parker.
Greece in Crisis: Culture, Identity, Politics

Opening Remarks

Dimitris Papanikolaou, Professor of Modern Greek Studies, St Cross College, University of Oxford, gives the opening remarks to the conference.
Greece in Crisis: Culture, Identity, Politics

Turning Infrastructures on their Head

Dimitris Dalakoglou (VU University, Amsterdam) gives the second talk in the fourth panel; Philanthropy or Solidarity? Ethical Dilemmas about Humanitarian Action in Times of Austerity.
Greece in Crisis: Culture, Identity, Politics

Philanthropy or Solidarity? Ethical Dilemmas about Humanitarian Action in Times of Austerity

Dimitrios Theodossopoulos (University of Kent) gives the first talk in the fourth panel; Citizenship, Networks, Publics
Greece in Crisis: Culture, Identity, Politics

Depicting the Pain of Others: Photography, Refugees and the Ethics of Seeing in the Aegean Shores

George Giannakopoulos (Queen Mary, University of London) gives the second talk in the third panel; Crisis in the Frame.
Greece in Crisis: Culture, Identity, Politics

Representing the Greek Depression: The Photography of Crisis

Penelope Petsini (Independent scholar and critic, Athens), gives the first talk in the third panel; Crisis in the Frame.
Greece in Crisis: Culture, Identity, Politics

Pride and Prejudice: Archeopolitics and the Iconology of the Crisis

Dimitris Tziovas (University of Birmingham), gives the second talk in the second panel Using Cultural Capital.
Greece in Crisis: Culture, Identity, Politics

Poems that Warn and Console: Appropriations of C.P.Cavafy at the Dawn of the Greek Financial Crisis

Foteini Dimirouli (University of Oxford) gives the first talk in Panel 2: Using Cultural Capital.
Greece in Crisis: Culture, Identity, Politics

Narratives of the Greek Crisis: Books vs. Social Media?

Eleni Papargyriou (King’s College, University of London) gives the second presentation from the first panel Writing (in) the Crisis.
Greece in Crisis: Culture, Identity, Politics

“Not a Diagnosis, but a Symptom”: Contemporary Greek Poetry in Transition

Thodoris Chiotis (Onassis Cultural Foundation, Athens) gives first presentation from the first panel Writing (in) the Crisis.
Renegotiations of History in light of the 'Greek Crisis'

From the Crisis to Metamorphosis: History, Trauma and Loss in C. Oikonomou’s Kati tha ginei tha deis and D. Papamarkos’s MetaPoesis

Vassiliki Kaisidou (University of Oxford) gives the third talk in the fourth panel; 'Continuities and Ruptures': The 'Crisis' as a new period in Greek history?
Renegotiations of History in light of the 'Greek Crisis'

“Greek drama”: The role of heritage in spectacle creation during the Greek economic crisis

Mina Dragouni (UCL Institute for Sustainable Heritage) gives the second talk in the fourth panel 'Continuities and Ruptures': The 'Crisis' as a new period in Greek history?
Renegotiations of History in light of the 'Greek Crisis'

Far-right blogging and migration: discourses and aesthetics

Ismini Sioula-Georgoulea (Panteion University of Political and Social Sciences), gives the first talk in the fourth panel 'Continuities and Ruptures': The 'Crisis' as a new period in Greek history?
Renegotiations of History in light of the 'Greek Crisis'

Crisis and memory on the foreign stage: The bilingual Abandon the Citizens

Maria Mytilinaki Kennedy (CUNY) gives the third talk in the panel; Renegotiations from the 'outside': International Discourses and Diasporic Perspectives.
Renegotiations of History in light of the 'Greek Crisis'

A love-hate relationship? The impact of historical Philhellenism on Germany’s view of the “Greek Crisis”

Dr. Helen Roche (University of Cambridge) gives the second talk in the third panel; Renegotiations from the 'outside': International Discourses and Diasporic Perspectives.
Renegotiations of History in light of the 'Greek Crisis'

The ‘refugee crisis’ as a neo-orientalist discourse

Maria Kenti Kranidioti (University of Durham), gives the first talk in panel 3; Renegotiations from the 'outside': International Discourses and Diasporic Perspectives.
Renegotiations of History in light of the 'Greek Crisis'

The “Polytechnic generation” in modern Greek “literature of the crisis”: the cases of Petros Markaris and Rhea Galanaki

Yannis Vangelokostas (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki), gives the third talk in panel 2; A Panorama of the 20th Century: Dominant Discourses, Resistance and Culpability.
Renegotiations of History in light of the 'Greek Crisis'

Which Side Are You On?: Historical Divisions as Identity Re-inventions during the Greek Crisis

Ioanna Manoussaki-Adamopoulou (UCL), gives the second talk in panel 2; A Panorama of the 20th Century: Dominant Discourses, Resistance and Culpability.
Renegotiations of History in light of the 'Greek Crisis'

Howling Kleftika: re-writing the Beats in the post-December youth (sub)cultures

Nikos Kalogiros (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki), gives the first talk in panel 2; A Panorama of the 20th Century: Dominant Discourses, Resistance and Culpability.

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