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1 - Marinos Papadopoulos Vretos: ‘Le trait d’union entre Paris et Athènes, l’intermédiaire naturel entre la Grèce et les Philhellènes des bords de la Seine’ (Victor Fournel, L’Espérance, 1858)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 January 2023

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Summary

Abstract

Marinos Papadopoulos Vretos (Corfu, 1828–Paris, 1871) represents a remarkable case of a conscious cultural mediator between Greece and France, during a critical time (1850–1870). Through a variety of print media (Greek, French or bilingual), he sought to inform the French-language public about the cultural identity of modern Greeks and to confute the distorted image provided by travel literature. Thanks to his excellent education in French, he managed to penetrate the French press, writing about Greek issues. He mobilised around him a network of French philhellenes, Hellenists and journalists who rebroadcasted his positions. Through his Greek-language Εϑνικόν Ημϵρολόγιον [National Almanac], he ‘coordinated’ an important discussion on the language question, preparing the road for the foundation of the Association pour l’encouragement des études grecques.

Keywords: Folk song, French public opinion, imagology, press and periodicals, language question, miso-philhellenism

Marinos Papadopoulos Vretos is a distinctive case of a public intellectual who was active between Greece and France during a critical era: the one defined by France's diplomatic move in founding the École d’Athènes (1846), the rejection of philhellenic schemata in the West and the start of miso-philhellenism’ from 1850 onwards, until the collaboration of Greek intellectuals and Hellenists – mainly French – for the promotion of Greek studies in France in the context of the Association pour l’encouragement des etudes grecques en France (from 1867). He provides an unexplored example of a conscious and steadily self-promoting multipolar mediator, with the objective of transferring the cultural identity of modern Greeks by spreading it through various kinds of printed cultural products.

Born in British-occupied Corfu in 1828, he lived for most of his life in France. His father was the scholar, bibliographer and diplomat Andreas Papadopoulos Vretos (1800–1876), well-known in French intellectual circles. From 1836 to 1841, Vretos, residing in Paris, studied at French schools, acquiring in this way an important asset for his future course: an excellent knowledge of the French language. He received a degree from the Faculty of Philosophy at the University of Athens (1849) and went on to study law at Pisa.

Type
Chapter
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Languages, Identities and Cultural Transfers
Modern Greeks in the European Press (1850-1900)
, pp. 33 - 64
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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