Description
Book SynopsisBetween 1900 and 1915, a quarter of the working-age male Greek population immigrated to the United States, Canada, and Australia. This profound demographic phenomenon left an indelible mark on Greek society, but also created new diasporic communities in the host countries. Greek immigration, Xenitia, has been studied by various disciplines, entering the popular mainstream through movies, comedy, television, academia, museums, and culinary institutions. The historical enterprise of Greek immigration in the 20th century, however, has lacked a significant archaeological voice. In this volume, new archaeological data from Epeiros, Kythera, Keos, the Southern Argolid, and the Nemea Valley highlight the effects of emigration, and data from Colorado, Philadelphia, and Sydney illustrate the effects of immigration. Abandoned households were coupled with new foundations, while a fluid transmission of moneys and resources created networks of goods and meanings far more complex than the traditional model of assimilation, economic prosperity, or the melting pot. Greek archaeology played a double role in constructing native and foreign ideologies, ranging from church foundations in the 1920s (Greek community in Philadelphia) to film productions for the war relief effort in the 1940s (documentary produced and newly restored by the American School). Finally, we see how excavated ruins inform current narratives of discovery and homecoming in a granddaughter's memoir that layers personal and textual lives with a rebuilt house. Such metanarratives (factual and idealized) reveal deep entanglements between archaeologist and immigrant.
Trade ReviewIn this small book, Kostis Kourelis has made an important contribution to the field of material culture studies with a refreshingly experimental and inclusive collection of essays, by various authors, devoted to post-classical archaeology.' -- Bryn Mawr Classical Review Bryn Mawr Classical Review
Table of ContentsIntroduction (
Kostis Kourelis); The Ruins of Engagement: Rural
Landscapes and Greek American Immigration (
Susan Buck Sutton);
Household Archaeology in Australia and Kythera: Examples of Two-Way
Exchange (
Timothy E. Gregory and Lita Tzortzopoulou-Gregory); The
Ludlow, Colorado, Coal Miners' Massacre of 1914: The Greek Connection
(
Philip Duke); From Greek Revival to Greek America: Archaeology and
Transformation in Saint George Orthodox Cathedral of Philadelphia
(
Kostis Kourelis); Exploring the Relationship of the American School
of Classical Studies at Athens with the Greek Omogeneia in the 1940s
(
Natalia Vogeikoff-Brogan); Home Again: The Recreation of a House, and
a History, in Epeiros (
Eleni N. Gage); Views on "The Archaeology of
Xenitia" from the Patrida (
Jack L. Davis).