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[Commlist] *Call for Book Chapters* The Greek 1940s in Popular Culture: Digital media, Films, Journalism, Art, and the Memory of the Occupation and Civil War
Mon Feb 07 13:02:46 GMT 2022
REMINDER *Call for Book Chapters* The Greek 1940s in Popular Culture:
Digital media, Films, Journalism, Art, and the Memory of the Occupation
and Civil War
The 1940s was ‘a decade of social disintegration, political collapse,
and mass violence unprecedented in degree and scale’ (Mazower, 2000:1).
During the 1940s, Greece experienced some of the most significant
moments in the contemporary history of the country, defining the
socio-political environment until today. Yet, Greece is one of the very
few European countries that do not official commemorate the end of the
war and the liberation of the country, while, at the same time, the
Civil War is considered more catastrophic than the Axis occupation and a
turning point for the Cold War by the official historiography.
Due to the political repression of the left, right-wing narratives
dominated the post-war era, and that had a significant impact on the
development of collective historical memory, as seen in other countries.
The dominant narration regarding Occupation and Civil War shaped by the
historical changes and democratic struggles of the following decades:
from the 1960s and the discussion around sociopolitical resistance, to
the military dictatorship’s extreme right-wing discourse of the 1970s,
all the way to the political reconciliation of the 1980s, signalling a
new historical era for the country and the ideological constructions of
the turmoiled decade of the 1940s. Until the late 1980s, the literature
was vastly focused on the study of resistance during occupation, while
after the early 1990s, the Civil War and collaboration with the Axis
were some of the topics investigated in the scholarship.
Despite the fact that lately there has been an increased focus on the
investigation of this period, it is the dominant media industries which
constructed in different ways the public discourse and collective memory
of the Civil War to this day. On the other hand, latest approaches on
the study of occupation and Civil War suggest that the media silencing
of the forces of liberation is followed by an intensified academic
attempt at the re-writing of history. Conservative academic historians
drive this process, claiming a sort of “hegemony of the left” in public
discourse, which was developed especially after the fall of the military
junta in 1974. They suggest that left-wing forces are unjustified to
assert that their efforts are not being represented enough or
proportionally in media and official historiography. For this reason,
they attempt to re-write history along so-called objective lines, to
show that the claims of the left on historiographic representation are
on the contrary untrue, and therefore illegitimate. Latest studies show
that such an attempt by historians fit into a framework of liberal
democratic Europe, thus having a specific ideological agenda, which in
no way holds an objective outlook on history. In other words, such
frameworks of analysing and re-writing history fit into the description
of a continuation of the civil war in other ways, because such revision
of history is producing and reproducing ideology, politics and power by
scholarly means.
Considering the impact of the 1940s on influencing and polarising Greek
political culture to this day, this edited volumed aims to bring
together academics, researchers, and practitioners to investigate:
1.Historical continuities and discontinuities in the public discourse
and the creation of diverse sets of publics, polarisation and conflict
in Greece and internationally;
2.Different forms of media contributing to the construction of public
discourse and collective memory online and offline: films, digital
media, journalism, art, memory and the representation of the 1940s;
3.Traditional, interdisciplinary approaches, and new
digital/computational tools that can be used for the study of occupation
and civil war in films, digital media, journalism, art, memory and the
representation of the 1940s
The editorial team [Ioanna Ferra, Higher School of Economics, and
Leandros Savvides, Global College Nicosia] welcomes manuscripts which
fit with the overall focus. Chapter proposals should include (a) Title
of the contribution/chapter and the preferred contribution section
(1-3), (b) Name, affiliation, and email address of each author (c)
Preliminary abstract of the proposed chapter (300-500words). Please
submit your chapter proposals to (thegreek40sinmedia /at/ gmail.com) by 15
February 2022. Final chapters between 5-7000 words, all-inclusive.
Timeline:
Proposal submission deadline: 15 February 2022
Editor decisions on proposals: 14 March 2022
Complete manuscript drafts due: 12 June 2022
Final manuscript due: 14 October 2022
Please email your chapter proposal to (thegreek40sinmedia /at/ gmail.com)
*No payment from the authors will be required/ No Article Processing Charges
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