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This collection examines major Greek authors from the early 19th century through the present day, spanning from romantic to post-modern authors, poets, and playwrights. The essays focus on intersections between oral and written traditions in nineteenth and twentieth century Greece. Major authors discussed included Solomos, Vizyenos, Papadiamantis, Seferis, and many others.
This collaborative volume focuses on imagined geography and the
relationships among power, knowledge, and space. A sequel to
Imperial Geographies in Byzantine and Ottoman Space, Imagined
Geographies in the Mediterranean, Middle East, and Beyond shares
with its predecessor a strong focus on the role of empire and ideas
of space viewed in inter-regional and interdisciplinary terms. Both
volumes bring together specialists on history, art history,
literature, and theater studies, but the present volume covers an
even wider geography than the first. In addition to the core
provinces of Byzantium and the Ottoman Empire in the eastern
Mediterranean and Middle East, it also includes connections between
these regions and others further away—notably Iran, Inner Asia,
and the Indian Ocean. The essays collected here suggest that the
phenomenon of imagined geographies is essentially discursive in
nature, since Self and Other may only be defined relative to one
another.
"Imperial Geographies in Byzantine and Ottoman Space" opens new and
insightful vistas on the nexus between empire and geography. The
volume redirects attention from the Atlantic to the space of the
eastern Mediterranean shaped by two empires of remarkable duration
and territorial extent, the Byzantine and the Ottoman. The essays
offer a diachronic and comparative account that spans the medieval
and early modern periods and reaches into the nineteenth century.
Methodologically rich, the essays combine historical, literary, and
theoretical perspectives. Through texts as diverse as court records
and chancery manuals, imperial treatises and fictional works,
travel literature and theatrical adaptations, the essays explore
ways in which the production of geographical knowledge supported
imperial authority or revealed its precarious mastery of geography.
The essays in "Ruse and Wit" examine in detail a wide range of
texts (from nonsensical prose, to ribald poetry, titillating
anecdotes, edifying plays, and journalistic satire) that span the
best part of a millennium of humorous and satirical writing in the
Islamic world, from classical Arabic to medieval and modern
Persian, and Ottoman Turkish (and by extension Modern Greek). While
acknowledging significant elements of continuity in the humorous
across distinct languages, divergent time periods, and disparate
geographical regions, the authors have not shied away from the
particular and the specific. When viewed collectively, the findings
presented in the essays collected here underscore the belief that
humor as evidenced in Arabic, Persian, and Turkish narrative is a
culturally modulated phenomenon, one that demands to be examined
with reference to its historical framework and one that, in turn,
communicates as much about those who produced humor as it does
about those who enjoyed it.
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