Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Note on transliteration and other editorial practices
- List of figures
- Introduction: Greece in the European press in the second half of the nineteenth century: Language, culture, identity
- 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)
- 2 Greek identities and French politics in the Revue des Deux Mondes (1846–1900)
- 3 The emergence of modern Greek studies in late-nineteenth century France and England: The yearbooks of the Association pour l’encouragement des études grecques en France (1867) and of the Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies (1877)
- 4 La Grèce moderne dans la Nouvelle Revue (1879-1899)
- 5 Medieval and modern Greece in the Academy
- 6 Modern Greek studies in Italy (1866–1897): Philhellenic revival and classical tradition through the lens of the Nuova Antologia
- 7 An interesting utopian undertaking: The Philhellenic Society of Amsterdam and the journal Eλλάς/Hellas (Leiden, 1889–1897)
- 8 Les études de grec moderne en Allemagne et la revue Byzantinische Zeitschrift (1892–1909)
- 9 La Grèce et l’Europe à travers l’insurrection crétoise de 1895–1897, reflétées dans la presse de l’époque
- Index of Names
- Index of Places
- Index of Newspapers and Periodicals
5 - Medieval and modern Greece in the Academy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 January 2023
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Note on transliteration and other editorial practices
- List of figures
- Introduction: Greece in the European press in the second half of the nineteenth century: Language, culture, identity
- 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)
- 2 Greek identities and French politics in the Revue des Deux Mondes (1846–1900)
- 3 The emergence of modern Greek studies in late-nineteenth century France and England: The yearbooks of the Association pour l’encouragement des études grecques en France (1867) and of the Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies (1877)
- 4 La Grèce moderne dans la Nouvelle Revue (1879-1899)
- 5 Medieval and modern Greece in the Academy
- 6 Modern Greek studies in Italy (1866–1897): Philhellenic revival and classical tradition through the lens of the Nuova Antologia
- 7 An interesting utopian undertaking: The Philhellenic Society of Amsterdam and the journal Eλλάς/Hellas (Leiden, 1889–1897)
- 8 Les études de grec moderne en Allemagne et la revue Byzantinische Zeitschrift (1892–1909)
- 9 La Grèce et l’Europe à travers l’insurrection crétoise de 1895–1897, reflétées dans la presse de l’époque
- Index of Names
- Index of Places
- Index of Newspapers and Periodicals
Summary
Abstract
This chapter's central concern is the search for the imprint of medieval and modern Greece in the high-culture British periodical press from the 1870s to the beginnings of the twentieth century through a case study of the Academy (1869–1916). Drawing on its progressive spirit and intellectual authority, the Academy displayed a serious scholarly interest in contemporary research on the language, literature and history of the Greeks beyond classical times to the present. A systematic investigation of its contents demonstrates the role exercised by a few of its contributors in the dissemination to the British educated public of such new knowledge. From this standpoint, the Academy served as a vehicle of late philhellenism: it promoted the idea of the continuum of Greek culture since ancient times while showing a considerable interest, distinct from that devoted to classical Hellas, in the study of the post-antique and contemporary Greek worlds.
Keywords: Medieval and modern Greek literature, Hellas, British periodicals, cultural mediation of modern Greece, philhellenism and philhellenes
[N]ow that questions relating to that country [modern Greece] occupy such a large part in the public mind, and are so freely discussed in the newspapers, there are many persons who will be glad to learn something more about its antecedents, to receive trustworthy information about its present condition, and to be able to judge for themselves whether the Greek kingdom is really the ‘spoilt child of Europe’, and whether the enthusiasm of fifty years ago in its favour, which was aroused throughout Europe by the War of Independence, was anything more than a fit of unreasoning sentiment.
So claims an 1880 review of R.C. Jebb's Modern Greece in the ‘Current Literature’ section of the London literary and scientific journal The Academy (1869–1916). Undoubtedly, in the last three decades of the nineteenth century, several factors combined to arouse public discussion in Britain of Greek matters, past and present: the political entanglements of the Eastern Question, ethnic rivalry in the Balkans, sore points in the Greek state's finances and administration (the Dilessi murders in 1870) as well as its attempts for expansion (rebellions in Ottoman-ruled Crete, Epirus and Macedonia, agitation over Thessaly and the Greco-Turkish War of 1897). Mixed sentiments characterised British public opinion towards modern Greeks, often verging on disdain or hostility.
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- Languages, Identities and Cultural TransfersModern Greeks in the European Press (1850-1900), pp. 137 - 166Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2021