Universität Wien

090112 VO The Beginnings of the Modern Greek State, 1830 - 1870 (2015W)

5.00 ECTS (2.00 SWS), SPL 9 - Altertumswissenschaften

Details

max. 40 Teilnehmer*innen
Sprache: Englisch

Prüfungstermine

Lehrende

Termine

MI wtl von 07.10.2015 bis 27.01.2016 16.00-17.30 Ort: Seminarraum d. Inst. f. Byzantinistik u. Neogräzistik, Postg. 7/1/3


Information

Ziele, Inhalte und Methode der Lehrveranstaltung

As Greece is once again coming to the forefront of a European crisis, this course proposes to go back to the beginnings of the Modern Greek state, in the period from the Restoration following the Napoleonic Wars until the rise of the era of nationalisms. During that period, the fates of the small kingdom on the southern edge of the Balkan peninsula, comprising less than half of the Greek territories of today, were linked to the so-called Eastern Question, that is the antagonism between the Great Powers for spheres of influence in the countries and territories belonging to the “sick man of Europe”, the declining Ottoman Empire.
A Bavarian bureaucracy that accompanied King Otto on his investment as King of the Greeks in 1833 first put the state apparatus of the newborn Kingdom of Greece together. As the main part of the Greek-orthodox populations of the Empire still remained beyond the borders of the state, the formation of the new state and its transition from an absolute to a constitutional monarchy after 1844, was marked by the tensions between autochthones (natives) - veterans of the war of independence and people born within the limits of the Greek State and heterochthones (non-natives) - those who were born and educated abroad. Taking into account the complex demography of a nation composed by various ethnic groups, we will revisit the formation of the Greek State as a joint Nation- and State-building process. Within the changing context of European cultural and political geographies, the creation of institutions of a modern state on pre-modern social and cultural foundations together with the precarious geopolitical position of the country, made for a constitutive ambivalence in the identity of the new nation, between East and West.
The course will cover subjects such as the dialectics of public debt and the subsequent defaults of payments; the formation of the legal field and the history of competing economies of violence (between law enforcement agents, pirates and bandits); the making of a national education system and the emergence of national historiography during the period under consideration.

Art der Leistungskontrolle und erlaubte Hilfsmittel

Written exam. Responses may be provided in English or German.

Mindestanforderungen und Beurteilungsmaßstab

Since the era of the so-called Double Revolution, the developments on Europe’s south-eastern edge presaged major social and political transformations on the continent. The course is an introduction to the questions the political, economic and cultural issues that determined the formation of the Modern Greek state.

Prüfungsstoff

Examining the formation of the modern Greek state within its international context, in domestic and international politics as well as the various cultural articulations of Greek nationalism, we will use primary sources and secondary literature as a means the social and cultural impact of those evolutions and social transformations.

Literatur

BASIC READINGS
- T. Gallant, The Edinburgh History of the Greeks, 1768 to 1913, Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2015.
- R. Clogg, A Concise History of Greece, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2002.
- I. Zelepos, Kleine Gescichte Griechenlands, München, Beck, 2014.

Zuordnung im Vorlesungsverzeichnis

Letzte Änderung: Mo 07.09.2020 15:31