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  • Contributors

Hasan Çolak is Assistant Professor of Ottoman History at TOBB University of Economics and Technology. He conducts research on the Greek Orthodox community as part of the Ottoman world, with a particular eye to its administrative, commercial, and intellectual aspects. He is the author of The Orthodox Church in the Early Modern Middle East (Turkish Historical Society, 2015). With Elif Bayraktar-Tellan, he has published The Orthodox Church as an Ottoman Institution (2019) and established the book series Ecclesiastica Ottomanica, both with Isis Press. He is a 2020 recipient of the Outstanding Young Scientist Award from the Turkish Academy of Sciences.

Foteini Dimirouli is Early Career Development Fellow at Keble College, University of Oxford. She works on English and Modern Greek literature and culture, often in comparison with one another. Her key topics of interest include transnational literary dialogue, the workings of the cultural field, and the process of canon formation. Her monograph Authorising the Other: C. P. Cavafy in the English and American Literary Scenes (under contract with Oxford University Press, 2022) examines writings by influential Anglophone authors who were pivotal to the Greek-Alexandrian poet C. P. Cavafy's rising international acclaim over the twentieth century.

Maik Fielitz is a researcher at the Institute for Democracy and Civil Society Jena, a doctoral fellow at the Center for Analysis of the Radical Right, and a PhD candidate at Goethe University Frankfurt am Main. His dissertation focuses on the rise of neo-Nazism and the transformation of the Far Right in Greece. His most recent publication, coauthored with Nick Thurston, is Post-Digital Cultures of the Far Right (Transcript, 2019).

Eugenia Georges is Professor of Anthropology at Rice University. Her research focuses on reproductive technologies, obstetrical practices, and transformations in understandings of pregnancy and childbirth in Greece. She is the author of Bodies of Knowledge: The Medicalization of Reproduction in Greece (Vanderbilt University Press) and The Making of a Transnational Community: Migration, Development and Cultural Change in the Dominican Republic (Columbia University Press).

Helena González-Vaquerizo is Lecturer in Classical Philology at the Autonomous University of Madrid. Her interests include the modern reception of ancient myths in literature, music, and science, and the impact of the past upon modern identities. She has published several papers on Nikos Kazantzakis's Odyssey and is member of the research project Marginalia Classica.

Emmanouela Kantzia studied Modern Greek and comparative literature. She teaches Modern Greek literature at Pierce College–The American College of Greece. Her current research focuses on the work of Demetrios Capetanakis and she has edited a first volume of his collected works (Δημήτριος Καπετανάκης, Έργα 1. Tα δημοσιευμένα 1933–1944, MIET-EΚEΠ, Athens 2020).

Antonis Kotsonas is Associate Professor of Mediterranean History and Archaeology at the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World, New York University. His research focuses on the material culture and socio-cultural and economic history of ancient Greece and the Mediterranean, as well as on the history of classical archaeology. He is co-director of the Lyktos Archaeological Project in Crete. His latest major work is A Companion to the Archaeology of Early Greece and the Mediterranean, co-edited with Irene S. Lemos (2020).

Christos Mais is an independent researcher based in Thessaloniki, Greece. He holds a PhD from the Centre for the Arts in Society at Leiden University. He is a historian and a cultural studies expert. He is interested in the Greek 1960s, book history, the social and oral history of Greece, and Cypriot social history.

Eleni Papargyriou is Assistant Professor of Modern Greek Literature at the University of Patras. Her research interests revolve around literary modernism, intertextuality, and visual culture. She has published the monograph Reading Games in the Greek Novel (Oxford: Legenda, 2011) and co-edited the volumes Camera Graeca: Photographs, Narratives, Materialities (Ashgate, 2015), Greece in British Women's Literary Imagination, 1913–2013 (Peter Lang, 2017), and the Journal of Greek Media and Culture special issue "Cavafy Pop: Readings of C. P. Cavafy in Popular Culture" (2015). She is a member of the executive board and reviews editor of the Journal of Greek Media and Culture.

Mogens Pelt is director of the Danish Institute at Athens and Associate Professor in International History...

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