Friday, November 23, 2012

Diaspora in the News (2012– )

• Thankful for Immigrant Roots, http://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2012/11/20/thanksgiving-immigration-greece-america/1718023/

• Ελληνοαμερικανίδα πολιτική αναλύτρια ειρωνεύεται τους φτωχούς, http://www.tovima.gr/world/article/?aid=485411

• Διασπορά και Συγκομιδή του Ελληνισμού, http://news.kathimerini.gr/4dcgi/_w_articles_columns_2_21/10/2012_499403

• NYC and the Iconic Greek Coffee Cup, http://www.kathimerini.gr/4dcgi/_w_articles_kathremote_1_04/09/2012_459622 

• Χαμένοι στα μάτια δικών μας και ξένων, http://www.kathimerini.gr/4dcgi/_w_articles_kathpolitics_1_06/06/2012_445542

• Greek American author Νάταλι Μπακόπουλος, http://www.tovima.gr/books-ideas/article/?aid=459344

• A Greek American documentary maker
http://www.tovima.gr/culture/article/?aid=458225&h1=true

• Up Greek Tourism, http://www.upgreektourism.gr/ [diaspora and the Greek crisis]
• The Diaspora and the Greek Crisis, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/aphrodite-bouikidis/greek diaspora_b_1370992.html [diaspora and the Greek crisis, youth]

• Ο Πρόεδρος της Δημοκρατίας για την Διασπορά (03/22/12), http://www.tovima.gr/politics/article/?aid=449871&h1=true [Πολιτεία και Διασπορά]


• Ελληνικό Πολιτιστικό Κέντρο στη Μελβούρνη (επιδότηση από την Κυβέρνηση της Αυστραλίας)
http://www.tovima.gr/culture/article/?aid=446020&h1=true

• Σπύρος Σταθουλόπουλος: Ο Έλληνας Σκηνοθέτης από την Κολομβία http://www.tovima.gr/culture/article/?aid=440651


Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Making Oral History Public on the Web

Of possible interest to curators of Oral History Programs in Greek American Museums and elsewhere

The recently launched Freedom Mosaic site at: http://www.freedommosaic.com

"This is a site featuring recent interviews with civil rights and human rights conducted for the forthcoming National Center for Civil and Human Rights in Atlanta. CNN videographers and producers helped with the project, and the web site was done by the Razorfish design firm. The idea was to develop a dynamic web site that departed from many of the archivally-oriented civil rights-themes web sites, in an attempt to especially appeal to younger users, roughly 15-30 years old. ..."

Cliff Kuhn, Georgia State University 


Sunday, November 18, 2012

Greek Australian Poetry

Helen Nickas
A Diasporic Journey: Greek-Australian Poetry in Bilingual and English Publications

Image by Helen Nickas


Saturday, November 17, 2012

Friday, November 16, 2012

Greek American Poetry – New Collection


Poet Stephanos Papadopoulos Releases Third Collection of Poems:The Black Sea
Collection uses a cycle of poetic "monologues" to explore the story of the early 20th century Pontic Greeks

NOVEMBER 14, 2012 ‑- The Black Sea was published by Sheep Meadow Press yesterday. It is the third collection of poems from Greek-American poet and Civitella Ranieri Fellowship awardee Stephanos Papadopoulos. His previous collections include Hôtel-Dieu and Lost Days.

The Black Sea explores the historic "great catastrophe" of the Pontic Greeks of Asia Minor in the 1920s through a series of "sonnet-monologues" or voices from the past. Priests, prostitutes, soldiers, and a bizarre cast of characters move through this poetic reimagining of a tragic chapter in Greece’s history.

"These are simply poems about people and suffering, an homage to a generation of exiles, all victims of the futility of war," says Papadopoulos.

Based on the author's own family history, as well a fictitious retelling of scenes from the population exchange between Greece and Turkey, the poems in this book jump from the tragic to the humorously absurd, and focus on the very human folly of war, suffering and exile. Intrigued by the idea of an "inherited memory of war" and a series of old family photographs, the author set off on a motorcycle trip of the southern Black Sea, exploring the old Greek villages and monasteries of the Pontic Greeks and travelling across the same landscapes still inhabited by the ghosts of Strabo, Xenophon and Alexander the Great.

"Unobtrusively but decisively, Stephanos Papadopoulos' work is informed by various cultures: American, Greek, ancient and modern, French and English. He follows other poets, but mostly he follows his heart. In his poetry the melancholy of the modern finds its beauty in loss itself..." Stanley Moss.

About the Author
Stephanos Papadopoulos was born in North Carolina in 1976 but raised in Paris and Athens. In addition to authoring Hôtel-Dieu, Lost Days and The Black Sea, he worked as editor and co-translator (with Katerina Anghelaki-Rooke) of Derek Walcott’s Selected Poems into Greek. A bilingual selection of his poems was published in Italian by Casa Grande Editions in 2012, translated by Matteo Campagnoli. His poems and translations have appeared in journals such as The New Republic, The Yale Review, Poetry Review, Stand Magazine and numerous international journals and anthologies. He has translated works of Greek poets, K. Anghelaki-Rooke, Yiannis Ritsos and Kostas Karyotakis, among others.
He attended the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and spent a year at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland before graduating with a BA in Classical Archaeology from UNC. In 1998, his work attracted the attention of Derek Walcott, who invited him to attend the first Rat Island Foundation seminar in St. Lucia. After college he traveled widely, living in London, Paris, Greece, Guatemala and New York. He currently divides his time between Greece and the United States.
The Sheep Meadow Press
P.O. Box 1345
Riverdale, NY 10471
poetry@sheepmeadowpress.com
http://www.upne.com/1937679095.html


Thursday, November 15, 2012

American Moments: The Legacy of Greek Immigration

Exhibiting Greek Immigration in 
The National Hellenic Museum


Commentary in the Chicago Tribute


From the Archive: Jim Londos and Transnational Greek America



Sports and immigrant empowerment


and the transnational making of a legend




Wednesday, November 14, 2012

The Enduring Power of Aesthetic Hellenism




Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Fund Raising for a Film on Greek American Elderly Women



Olympia Dukakis and Rose Gregorio play 
Greek-American women in their 70s who create stories to avoid the realities of growing older



Wednesday, November 7, 2012