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Hoi Hellēnes tēs Amerikēs: hena megalo all' atragudisto epos
In: Hellēnoamerikanikē bibliothēkē ar. 2
Bardē B. Bardinogiannē , Panagiōtē G. Arōnē oi misoi sta sidera
In: Historia kai mnēmē 5
Tha se leme Ismēnē: oi anamnēseis einai megalyteres ap' tē zōē
In: Historia kai mnēmē 8
Archeion Michaēl Iatru: 1802 - 1893
In: Tetradia ergasias 6
Zsfassung in engl. Sprache
ΑΝΑΝΕΩΝΟΝΤΑΣ ΤΗ ΜΑΤΙΑ ΜΑΣ ΓΙΑ ΤΟ ΕΙΚΟΣΙΕΝΑ. ΜΕ ΑΦΟΡΜΗ ΤΟΝ ΜΑΚΡΥΓΙΑΝΝΗ ΤΟΥ ΝΙΚΟΥ ΘΕΟΤΟΚΑ
Δεν παρατίθεται περίληψη στα ελληνικά. ; Panayotis Stathis, Rethinking the 1821 Greek Revolution. A reading of Nikos Theotokas, The Life of General Makriyannis: History and Memoirs Nikos Theotokas' most recent book on Makriyannis is a characteristic specimen of new trends in the study of the Greek revolution of 1821, which shift emphasis from battles and politics to society. Theotokas uses as main analytical categories the antithetic notions of "tradition" and "modernity". However, Theotokas follows a less rigid and more sophisticated approach of this scheme. Instead of treating people of the traditional and modern world in a static way, he explores how they interacted, and emphasizes the dynamic nature of their relationship during the transitional period of the revolution. Theotokas' study on Makriyannis comprises a double venture. On the one hand it constitutes a historical biography of the General, while on the other it examines the long process of writing (1829-1852) his memoirs. Through this parallel narrative, Theotokas reveals how Makriyannis' changing attitude towards facts stated in the memoirs is modified by the specific historical conjuncture in which each of these facts is narrated by the author. The earliest parts of the text, written in the aftermath of the revolution, comprise a mixture of traditional and modern political discourse, in which the responsibility for both the negative developments of the war and of civil conflicts is often attributed to the traditional social elites. However, under the King Otto's reign, Makriyannis' expectations concerning his new position in the post-revolutionary society were gradually disappointed. Thus, in the latter parts of the memoirs Makriyannis clearly formulates a moralistic interpretation of the political developments, according to which the outlandish, selfish and warless politicians seized power and treated unfairly the pure fighters of the revolution who gave everything for its success.
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