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Book Cover
E-book
Author Mazower, Mark

Title After the War Was Over : Reconstructing the Family, Nation, and State in Greece, 1943-1960
Published Princeton : Princeton University Press, 2016

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Description 1 online resource (325 pages)
Series Princeton Modern Greek Studies
Princeton modern Greek studies.
Contents Cover ; Title ; Copyright ; Dedication ; Contents ; Abbreviations and Glossary of Terms ; Introduction ; ONE Three Forms of Political Justice: Greece, 1944-1945 ; TWO The Punishment of Collaborators in Northern Greece, 1945-1946 ; THREE Purging the University after Liberation
FOUR Between Negation and Self-Negation: Political Prisoners in Greece, 1945-1950 FIVE Children in Turmoil during the Civil War: Today's Adults ; SIX Left-Wing Women between Politics and Family
SEVEN The Impossible Return: Coping with Separation and the Reconstruction of Memory in the Wake of the Civil War EIGHT Red Terror: Leftist Violence during the Occupation ; NINE The Civil War in Evrytania ; TEN The Policing of Deskati, 1942-1946
ELEVEN Protocol and Pageantry: Celebrating the Nation in Northern Greece TWELVE "After the War We Were All Together": Jewish Memories of Postwar Thessaloniki ; THIRTEEN Memories of the Bulgarian Occupation of Eastern Macedonia: Three Generations
FOURTEEN "An Affair of Politics, Not Justice": The Merten Trial (1957-1959) and Greek-German Relations List of Contributors ; Index
Summary This volume makes available some of the most exciting research currently underway into Greek society after Liberation. Together, its essays map a new social history of Greece in the 1940s and 1950s, a period in which the country grappled--bloodily--with foreign occupation and intense civil conflict. Extending innovative historical approaches to Greece, the contributors explore how war and civil war affected the family, the law, and the state. They examine how people led their lives, as communities and individuals, at a time of political polarization in a country on the front line of the Cold War's division of Europe. And they advance the ongoing reassessment of what happened in postwar Europe by including regional and village histories and by examining long-running issues of nationalism and ethnicity. Previously neglected subjects--from children and women in the resistance and in prisons to the state use of pageantry--yield fresh insights. By focusing on episodes such as the problems of Jewish survivors in Salonika, memories of the Bulgarian occupation of northern Greece, and the controversial arrest of a war criminal, these scholars begin to answer persistent questions about war and its repercussions. How do people respond to repression? How deep are ethnic divisions? Which forms of power emerge under a weakened state? When forced to choose, will parents sacrifice family or ideology? How do ordinary people surmount wartime grievances to live together? In addition to the editor, the contributors are Eleni Haidia, Procopis Papastratis, Polymeris Voglis, Mando Dalianis, Tassoula Vervenioti, Riki van Boeschoten, John Sakkas, Lee Sarafis, Stathis N. Kalyvas, Anastasia Karakasidou, Bea Lefkowicz, Xanthippi Kotzageorgi-Zymari, Tassos Hadjianastassiou, and Susanne-Sophia Spiliotis
Notes In English
Print version record
Subject Reconstruction (1939-1951) -- Political aspects -- Greece
Greeks -- Social conditions -- 1945-
HISTORY -- Europe -- General.
Greeks -- Social conditions
SUBJECT Greece -- History -- Civil War, 1944-1949. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85057104
Subject Greece
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781400884438
1400884438