From vrasidas.karalis at sydney.edu.au Sat Feb 15 15:08:23 2020 From: vrasidas.karalis at sydney.edu.au (Vrasidas Karalis) Date: Sat, 15 Feb 2020 04:08:23 +0000 Subject: [Moderngreek-l] NVITATION TO ACADEMIC WELCOME OF HIS EMINENCE ARCHBISHOP MAKARIOS AT SYDNEY UNIVERSITY Message-ID: The Department of Modern Greek and Byzantine Studies Invites You To a Meeting With The Primate of the Greek-Orthodox Church in Australia His Eminence Archbishop Makarios With the Opportunity of the New Academic Year 2020 At the Nicholson Museum Main Quad The University of Sydney Tuesday, 25 February 2020 Starting Time 6.00 Pm For 6.30 Light Refreshments Will Be Offered -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From vrasidas.karalis at sydney.edu.au Thu Feb 20 14:26:13 2020 From: vrasidas.karalis at sydney.edu.au (Vrasidas Karalis) Date: Thu, 20 Feb 2020 03:26:13 +0000 Subject: [Moderngreek-l] CANCELLATION OF ACADEMIC RECEPTION Message-ID: Dear Friends Due to UNFORSEEN CIRCUMSTANCES We have to cancel the Academic Reception Welcoming The New Primate of the Greek-Orthodox Church in Australia His Eminence Archbishop Makarios. The Reception will be rescheduled for later In the year. We apologize for any inconvenience Vrasidas Karalis Professor Sir Nicholas Laurantos Chair in Byzantine &Modern Greek Studies -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From vrasidas.karalis at sydney.edu.au Thu Feb 20 15:59:21 2020 From: vrasidas.karalis at sydney.edu.au (Vrasidas Karalis) Date: Thu, 20 Feb 2020 04:59:21 +0000 Subject: [Moderngreek-l] 15TH BIENNIAL CONFERENCE OF MGSAANZ, AUSTRALIA, 10-12 DECEMBER 2010, THE UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY CALL FOR PAPERS Message-ID: MODERN GREEK STUDIES ASSOCIATION OF AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND 15TH BIENNIAL CONFERENCE THE UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY DECEMBER 10-12, 2020 FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS Deadline: 30th July 2020 Re-Viewing the Neo-Hellenic Project: 200 years after the Greek Revolution Organising Committee: Vrasidas Karalis, The University of Sydney Anthony Dracopoulos, The University of Sydney Panayota Nazou, Emerita, the University of Sydney Elizabeth Kefallinos, Macquarie University Two hundred years after the Greek Revolution, there is considerable debate taking place about the future of the Greek project as it started in 1821, focusing on its achievements, failures and perspectives. The Conference offers a great opportunity to scholars, academics, researchers and students to discuss about the past in critical, creative and yet dispassionate ways, exploring its legacies and reconsidering its perspectives. The Greek revolution was one of the most important events of the 19th century, re-invigorating the ideas of the French Revolution and bringing them to the East. The invention of a new cultural space for modernity through the introduction of the new form of social organization, the nation-state, meant deep changes in the cultural imaginary of the Greek communities in Greece proper and in the diaspora. What was before diffused and polycentric was gradually reduced and concentrated to a specific space and a demarcated national territory. During this process, several questions emerged about the physiognomy, the ideology and the cultural specificity of Greek culture and if it exists. This debate continues through the various political and social adventures of the Greek-nation-state and its diasporic communities. The conference wants to critically explore various conceptual forms of thinking, patterns of self-articulation and images of self-representation that were constructed over the last 200 years. It wants also to investigate their impact in order to delineate a narrative reconstruction of the intellectual history of modern Greeks inside and outside the Greek state, focusing on their reflections over history, literature, art, language, society, cinema, education, music, politics and of course patterns of self-perception, ideological allegiance, religious identification, and geopolitical re-orientation. Furthermore, it wants to explore the specific work of major cultural figures before and after the establishment of the Greek state, starting with their pioneering work during the Greek Enlightenment and their legacy until today, a period of intense historical and political revisionism. Abstracts must be around 300 words. Sent to: Vrasidas.Karalis at sydney.edu.au or/and Anthony.Dracopoulos at sydney.edu.au -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: