Greek Community of Melbourne
 
 

The 1821 Revolution and Greek Village Life Today

 

Where:  Zoom, YouTube Live, Facebook Live
Date: THURSDAY 10 June 2021 @ 7:00pm AEST (Melbourne) | 12:00pm EEST (Athens) | 5:00am EDT (New York)
Presenter: Professor Michael Herzfeld

Language of Presentation: English | No knowledge of Greek required
Entry: FREE

 
 

Synopsis

 

The rural village lies at the heart of the Greek national imagination, and undoubtedly played a major role in sustaining a sense of adherence to Greek religious, cultural, and linguistic values over the centuries. At the same time, certain aspects of village life – notably the organization of family and kin relations, the division of land and other forms of property, rituals of reciprocity and mutual assistance, and attitudes to conflict – have changed in much of rural Greece. It is very easy to imagine pre-Independence Greece through these newer images, but a few places – notably in Mani and on Crete – retain the older characteristics and allow us to understand both the forms of resistance to Ottoman rule and the difficulties that these areas have experienced in accepting the bureaucratic regulation of their daily affairs. The speaker, an anthropologist with long experience of working in rural Crete, will illustrate his talk with examples from his fieldwork.

 
 

How To Participate

 

This is an online-only event. It will be simulcasted to Zoom, YouTube Live and Facebook Live

 
 
 
 
 
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The Greek Community of Melbourne is registered as a charity with the Australian Charities and Non-Profits Commission ABN 14004258360