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  • Contributors

Roland Betancourt is a fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton for the 2016–2017 academic year and Assistant Professor of Art History at the University of California, Irvine. His work focuses on matters of perception, medium, and temporality in Byzantine art and its contemporary parallels. He has coedited with Maria Taroutina Byzantium/Modernism: The Byzantine as Method in Modernity (Brill, 2015).

Nicos Christodoulakis is Professor of Economic Analysis at the Athens University of Economics and Business and also a Research Associate with the Hellenic Observatory, London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). His recent book is The Greek Endgame: From Austerity to Growth or Grexit (Rowman and Littlefield, 2015).

Van Coufoudakis is Professor Emeritus of Political Science at Indiana University-Purdue University. Previously, he served as Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, Indiana University-Purdue University at Fort Wayne. Following his retirement from the Indiana University system, he was Rector of the University of Nicosia in the Republic of Cyprus. His most recent position was that of President of the Hellenic Quality Assurance and Accreditation Agency (ADIP), an independent agency of the government of Greece. He is the author of four books and some one hundred book chapters and articles published in professional journals in the US, Canada, and Europe.

Nobuyoshi Fujinami is Associate Professor at Tsuda College, Tokyo, specializing in the modern Ottoman and Greek history. He is the author of The Ottomans and Constitutionalism: Politics, Religion, and Communities in the Young Turk Revolution (University of Nagoya Press, 2011, in Japanese). He has published many articles, including “Privileged but Equal: The Privilege Question in the Context of Ottoman Constitutionalism,” in Balkan Nationalism(s) and the Ottoman Empire, Vol. 3: The Young Turk Revolution and Ethnic Groups, edited by Dimitris Stamatopoulos (The Isis Press, 2015). [End Page 442]

Haris Exertzoglou is Professor of Social and Cultural History in the Department of Social Anthropology and History at the University of the Aegean. His latest publications include the book Δυσμών το φως; Εξελληνισμός και οριενταλισμός στην οθωμανική αυτοκρατορία, μέσα 19ου αρχές 20ου αιώνα (Ex occidente lux? Hellenization and Orientalism in the Ottoman Empire, nineteenth to early twentieth century) (Ekdoseis tou Eikostou Protou, 2015).

Georgios Giannakopoulos is Teaching Associate in the Department of History, Queen Mary, University of London. In the fall of 2015, he held a visiting fellowship at the Remarque Institute, NYU. His research revolves around ideas of nationalism and internationalism in early twentieth-century Britain, with an emphasis on Eastern Europe. He is currently working on a book project stemming from his PhD tentatively entitled The Politics of Contemporary History: British Intellectuals and the National Questions in Europe’s Eastern Periphery (1900–1930). For more about his research, one can visit www.geogian.com.

Angela C. Glaros is Assistant Professor of Anthropology and Women’s Studies at Eastern Illinois University. Her research interests include gender, music, and religion in Greece and Greek-American communities. Her latest publication is “Turning the Song: Music, Power, and the Aesthetics of Collaboration,” published in the journal Collaborative Anthropologies (2013).

Yannis Hamilakis is Joukowsky Family Professor of Archaeology and Professor of Modern Greek Studies at Brown University. He taught previously at the University of Wales, Lampeter (1996–2000) and the University of Southampton (2000–2016). He currently codirects the Koutroulou Magoula Archaeology and Archaeological Ethnography Project and has carried out extensive work as part of the Kalaureia Research Program. His research interests include the politics of the past, embodiment, sensoriality and affect, premodern archaeologies, and the links between the photographic and the archaeological. His most recent book is Camera Kalaureia: An Archaeological Photo-ethnography (Archaeopress, 2016), coauthored with Fotis Ifantidis.

Martha Karpozilou is Professor of Modern Greek Studies at the University of Ioannina. Her research and teaching interests cover the cultural/literary and educational history of the nineteenth century. More specifically, her writings focus on letter-writing manuals, family magazines, and literary reviews, as well as the role of children’s books in the Greek literary scene. She is currently working on a detailed bibliography of Greek periodicals (1811–1900).

Margaret Kenna is Emerita Professor of Social Anthropology at Swansea University, Wales, UK. Her research interests include kinship, ritual, and tourism. Her latest publication is “Rituals of Forgiveness and Structures...

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