Saturday, May 30, 2026

THE MARBLES AND THE FEAR OF DISPUTATION

 


There exists within the modern Greek relationship with antiquity a peculiar and persistent irony. Few nations invoke with greater frequency the vocabulary of civilisation, and fewer still derive such symbolic legitimacy from the memory of philosophical disputation, democratic speech, and intellectual openness. The shadow of Athens continues to stretch comfortingly across contemporary Greek cultural life, summoned almost liturgically whenever questions of heritage, morality, or historical justice arise. Yet one occasionally suspects that modern Hellenism cherishes the marble residue of classical civilisation more readily than the far more exacting intellectual disciplines that once animated it. Ruins are infinitely easier to inherit than habits of mind.
Such reflections arise almost involuntarily upon learning that the Acropolis Museum has recently vetoed the appearance of archaeologist Dr Mario Trabucco della Torretta at a conference in Athens because of his publicly expressed defence of Britain’s retention of the Parthenon Marbles. The episode possesses all the melancholy symbolism of a civilisation invoking the memory of intellectual disputation while recoiling from the discomfort occasioned by the utterance of a dissenting voice beneath its own sacred stones.
One must be clear from the outset. The Greek claim for the reunification of the Marbles remains profound, compelling, and morally resonant. The sculptures were conceived neither as autonomous decorative curiosities nor as detached museum pieces intended for perpetual circulation through imperial collections. They formed part of a living architectural and spiritual unity whose mutilated body still stands upon the Acropolis itself, wounded by centuries of conquest, bombardment, appropriation, and European appetite. The argument for their return derives its force certainly from questions of legality, but also from coherence, continuity, memory, and the indivisibility of the monument itself. One need not descend into sentimental nationalism in order to perceive the extraordinary violence implicit in the dismemberment of the Parthenon and in the continuous deprivation of its fragments.
Nor is one obliged to accept the arguments advanced by Dr Trabucco in order to find this episode troubling. His assertions concerning Ottoman legality, the alleged firman authorising Elgin’s removals, and the proposition that the sculptures have now become inseparable from British historical identity remain deeply contested. Indeed, it has been argued persuasively that the evidentiary basis for Elgin’s claims of lawful acquisition remains fragmentary at best. The original firman has never been produced, the surviving Italian translation remains ambiguous in scope, and distinguished Ottoman historians continue to dispute whether permission to sketch and remove loose fragments could ever reasonably be interpreted as authorisation for the systematic stripping of sculptural elements from the Parthenon itself. Nor is the claim that the Marbles have become “British” through duration of possession especially novel. It has circulated in one form or another for generations and increasingly resembles an exhausted imperial sentimentality masquerading as historical inevitability.
Yet precisely because many of these arguments appear weak, repetitive, or morally unconvincing, the insecurity displayed by the museum becomes all the more bewildering.
What danger, after all, does this archaeologist truly represent? Was it feared that a single lecture might somehow dissolve centuries of historical consciousness and persuade Athens that Lord Elgin was in fact the misunderstood benefactor of Hellenic civilisation?
Greece above all places ought to possess sufficient confidence to permit argument to unfold publicly and thereafter answer it through superior scholarship, historical evidence, rhetorical precision, and moral force. One would have imagined that Greek and philhellenic intellectuals should positively relish the opportunity to dismantle the claims of retentionists before an international audience. There exists a particular satisfaction in observing weak arguments unravel beneath scrutiny, especially when they depend upon the exhausted legal abstractions of nineteenth century imperial entitlement. The proper response to disputation is refutation.
Indeed, serious opposition performs a service to any cause that wishes to remain intellectually alive. Through contestation, arguments are refined, assumptions interrogated, complacencies exposed, and slogans purified into thought. Ideas sheltered perpetually from challenge gradually harden into ceremonial phrases repeated mechanically by institutions that no longer remember how to defend them.
There is, of course, force in the counterargument advanced by campaigners such as Elly Symons, who correctly observes that Dr Trabucco has previously spoken publicly in Athens, has not been deprived of platforms altogether, and possesses no inherent entitlement to address every institution he wishes. Nor is it unreasonable to suggest that the Acropolis Museum, as an institution with a clearly defined curatorial and cultural mission, may legitimately choose not to provide a stage for arguments it regards as historically exhausted or fundamentally unpersuasive. One may also sympathise with the fatigue of those who have spent decades repeatedly answering what they consider variations of the same retentionist claims.
Yet even here, a deeper discomfort remains. The issue concerns the symbolism of exclusion within a civilisation that continuously invokes the legacy of intellectual disputation as part of its moral and cultural authority. A museum that consciously presents itself as the custodian of one of humanity’s foundational civilisations inevitably becomes more than a mere venue exercising ordinary curatorial discretion. Its decisions acquire philosophical and symbolic dimensions beyond administrative preference.
The irony sharpens further when one considers that the British argument concerning the Marbles has seldom appeared weaker internationally than it does today. The old imperial certainties have faded considerably within an age increasingly conscious of colonial extraction, cultural dispossession, and the moral ambiguities of empire. Polling within Britain itself has shifted steadily toward some form of reunification. The language of universal museums and legal acquisition retains juridical force, certainly, yet frequently sounds morally exhausted when measured against broader contemporary conversations concerning restitution and historical justice.
By excluding Dr Trabucco altogether, the museum transformed a relatively minor intervention into an international controversy concerning censorship, intolerance, and insecurity. Through prohibition, the institution inadvertently conferred upon him a significance that his lecture itself may never have achieved.
One perceives throughout much of the contemporary West a broader transformation of universities, museums, and cultural institutions from arenas of intellectual encounter into mechanisms for the administration of moral orthodoxy. Increasingly, such institutions appear less concerned with facilitating difficult conversation than with regulating permissible discourse. Modern museums in particular increasingly resemble secular temples within which curators function as custodians not merely of objects, but of approved moral narratives.
This tendency appears especially tragic in Greece because modern Hellenism already labours beneath a profound psychological contradiction. Greeks are raised upon the consciousness of belonging to one of humanity’s foundational civilisations, yet simultaneously inhabit the uneasy margins of contemporary geopolitical power. The result is often an oscillation between pride and insecurity, between invocations of cultural greatness and anxious sensitivity toward external judgement. Criticism comes to be experienced not merely as disagreement, but as diminishment itself, while opposition acquires the character of sacrilege.
Modern Greece as a polity has also rarely displayed great generosity toward intellectual dissent. Beneath the romantic invocations of democratic inheritance lies a long and deeply ingrained culture of ideological ostracism. From the National Schism to the Metaxist period, from the Civil War and its aftermath to the colonels’ dictatorship and even into contemporary political life, Greeks have repeatedly demonstrated a tendency to divide public life into camps of moral legitimacy and moral contamination. The individual has frequently been judged less upon the merit of his arguments than upon the perceived acceptability of his loyalties, affiliations, or ideas. Public pillorying possesses a long pedigree in modern Greek political culture. In this sense, the exclusion of an inconvenient academic from the Acropolis Museum does not emerge as an aberration so much as a continuation of an older habit of mind.
Consequently, certain Greek institutions appear to seek affirmation more eagerly than contestation. Foreign admiration is welcomed warmly provided it arrives clothed in reverence. Genuine intellectual disagreement, however, frequently provokes disproportionate alarm, as though Hellenism itself were too fragile to survive exposure to hostile argument. There are occasions when modern Hellenism mistakes emotional intensity for civilisational confidence. True confidence possesses serenity, neither panicking before contradiction nor seeking administrative shelter from dissenting voices.
Make no mistake. This is not merely a Greek problem. The contemporary world increasingly confuses moral certainty with intellectual seriousness. Every nation requires historical memory. Yet memory ceases to function properly once insulated from scrutiny. At that point it passes from remembrance into mythology, and mythology, unlike history, cannot tolerate interruption.
Diasporic Greeks ought not to ignore the implications of such episodes. Communities that have spent generations demanding recognition, visibility, and the right to narrate their own historical experiences should instinctively understand the danger implicit in suppressing inconvenient speech. The desire to silence dissent eventually corrodes the moral authority upon which causes of historical justice depend. Sadly, similar phenomena can be found within our own organised community.
The Parthenon endured conversion into church and mosque, Venetian bombardment, Ottoman occupation, pollution, iconoclasm, imperial dismemberment, and the fantasies of successive European ideologues. Through catastrophe after catastrophe, it survived the ambitions of empires and the vanities of civilisations. One suspects therefore that it could also have survived an after-dinner lecture delivered by an archaeologist holding unfashionable views.
The true humiliation of Greece never consisted solely in the removal of marble from the Parthenon. Civilisations survive plunder, occupation and catastrophe. The deeper danger emerges when a civilisation loses confidence in the habits of mind that once rendered it great. If modern Hellenism truly wishes to persuade the world that the Marbles belong once more in Athens, it must recover confidence in disputation itself. The inheritance of Greece consists not solely in sculpted stone. It resides equally in the ancient and difficult discipline of permitting ideas to collide openly beneath the full light of reason.
Otherwise, the Acropolis risks becoming what so many civilisations eventually become once they lose faith in argument: a monument admired by tourists while the intellectual spirit that once animated it has long since departed.
DEAN KALIMNIOU
kalymnios@hotmail.com
First published in NKEE on Saturday 30 May 2026


Saturday, May 23, 2026

SCREENING KAPODISTRIAS


 

To depict Ioannis Kapodistrias cinematically is to confront one of the most difficult figures in modern Greek history. Kapodistrias does not lend himself naturally to heroic simplification. Unlike the romantic insurgent, the charismatic demagogue, or the revolutionary martyr fashioned easily into myth, he belongs to the colder world of diplomacy, administration, restraint, and political severity. His tragedy unfolded less upon the battlefield than within the contradictions of state formation itself: the attempt to impose institutional order upon a society emerging from revolution, regionalism, civil conflict, and economic devastation. The recent film Kapodistrias, directed by Yannis Smaragdis, approaches this immense subject with unmistakable reverence, though reverence proves precisely its greatest limitation. Like much contemporary Greek historical cinema, the film confuses commemoration with interpretation and symbolic affirmation with dramatic truth.

From its opening sequences, the film announces its devotional intentions. Kapodistrias emerges framed through mournful lighting, solemn orchestral accompaniment, and ceremonially composed imagery that continually elevates him above ordinary political humanity. The camera contemplates him as an icon rather than investigates him as a historical personality.

This constitutes the film’s central failure because the historical figure requires no embellishment. Kapodistrias already possesses the contradictions necessary for profound drama. Born into the aristocratic society of Venetian Corfu, educated within the intellectual currents of Enlightenment Europe, rising through diplomacy to become Foreign Minister of the Russian Empire and one of the most influential statesmen in Europe, helping shape Swiss neutrality while simultaneously aligning himself with the conservative post Napoleonic order, abandoning imperial prestige in order to govern a shattered revolutionary state, and ultimately being assassinated outside the church of Saint Spyridon in Nauplio by political enemies produced partly through his own methods of governance, his biography contains within itself the architecture of tragedy. The assassination itself is presented almost liturgically, as though constituting the original sin of the modern Greek state, the primordial national crime from which subsequent dysfunction, division, and instability flow. Yet the film never seriously interrogates whether this interpretation possesses historical validity or merely reflects a retrospective mythology requiring martyrdom in order to explain the failures of the Greek polity.

The screenplay also reproduces a remarkable number of nationalist exaggerations and historical distortions. Kapodistrias’ role in Swiss affairs and European diplomacy is inflated into near civilisational authorship, while his complicated relationship with revolutionary movements is softened into uncomplicated patriotic fervour despite his deep suspicion of conspiratorial nationalism and political insurrection. The cumulative effect is to transform a formidable diplomat and administrator into a quasi messianic figure upon whom the fate of nineteenth century Europe mysteriously appears to depend.

The real Kapodistrias was neither liberal visionary nor uncomplicated nationalist redeemer. His political outlook was profoundly shaped by the bureaucratic and hierarchical culture of European empires. While toying with liberal ideas, he ultimately came to distrust representative politics, feared factionalism, and regarded strong central authority as indispensable for national survival. During his years in Russian service, he opposed revolutionary upheaval across Europe and participated in the diplomatic structures established after the Congress of Vienna, structures explicitly designed to suppress political instability and revolutionary nationalism. These experiences formed the basis of his political philosophy upon arriving in Greece in 1828.

The film’s portrayal of Klemens von Metternich is especially revealing of its simplistic historical imagination. Metternich appears almost as a stock reactionary villain, the embodiment of repression opposing the righteous aspirations of Kapodistrias and Greek independence. Such treatment reduces one of the nineteenth century’s most sophisticated political minds into caricature. Historically, Metternich’s hostility toward revolutionary nationalism emerged from a determination to preserve the post Napoleonic European balance and prevent the destabilisation of multinational empires such as Austria. More importantly, the film entirely fails to recognise the uncomfortable extent to which Kapodistrias himself belonged to the same conservative diplomatic universe as Metternich. Both men emerged from the post Vienna order, distrusting revolutionary volatility and mass politics, believing in elite administration, political restraint, and disciplined state structures. The irony, which the film entirely misses, lies in the fact that Metternich recognised something essential about Kapodistrias that the film itself refuses to acknowledge: he was not an outsider to the conservative European order but one of its most capable practitioners.

The same simplification governs the film’s treatment of Kapodistrias’ rule within Greece itself. Kapodistrias appears primarily as a morally pure reformer opposed by selfish regional elites and foreign intrigues. Yet historically, the hostility directed toward him arose not merely from corruption or provincialism but from genuine fears regarding the concentration of authority. His inclusion of his brothers in government, dissolution of representative institutions, censorship of political opposition, imprisonment of regional figures such as Petrobey Mavromichalis, and relentless centralisation of administrative power generated intense resentment across substantial sections of Greek society. These actions emerged directly from his political philosophy.

The screenplay proves equally careless in its treatment of the political actors surrounding him. Revolutionary figures shaped by regional loyalties and competing visions for the Greek state are flattened into crude moral categories. The Maniots in particular appear less as autonomous political actors defending entrenched local authority than as irrational obstacles placed before Kapodistrias’ enlightened state building project.

What the film neglects most strikingly is perhaps the most modern dimension of Kapodistrias’ experience: his condition as an apodimos, a Greek abroad whose relationship with the homeland was shaped by distance, imagination, and sacrifice. Here the film possessed the possibility of genuine interpretive originality and entirely failed to recognise it. Kapodistrias belonged to a type that would later become deeply familiar throughout the Greek diaspora: the expatriate who abandons privilege and advancement abroad in order to regenerate an imagined homeland, only to discover himself regarded as an outsider by those he considers his own people.

The deepest tragedy lies in the fact that Kapodistrias himself appears never fully to have understood the nature of this estrangement. He remained convinced that patriotic sincerity, administrative competence, and personal sacrifice would ultimately reconcile him with the society he sought to govern. In this respect, his downfall possesses the structure of classical tragedy: a man destroyed partly through blindness to the historical and cultural realities surrounding him. Had the film possessed the interpretive courage to pursue this dimension of his life, it might have transcended patriotic hagiography entirely. Kapodistrias would then appear not merely as the murdered founder of the Greek state, but as the archetype of a recurring diasporic fate: the belief that devotion to the homeland guarantees belonging, when it may instead culminate in permanent estrangement from it.

The film appears deeply unwilling to confront the possibility that the founder of the Greek state may simultaneously have embodied authoritarian instincts fundamentally hostile to political pluralism. Instead, conflict is moralised into a binary opposition between enlightened patriotism and primitive obstruction. The complexities of post revolutionary Greece disappear beneath symbolic certainties. Kapodistrias remains permanently correct, his opponents permanently diminished.

This inability to sustain ambiguity reflects a wider pathology within modern Greek historical culture itself. Greek public discourse repeatedly collapses into moral binaries incapable of accommodating contradiction. Historical personalities become saints or traitors, visionaries or destroyers, patriots or collaborators. Intermediate positions generate discomfort because they destabilise the emotional certainties through which collective identity is organised. One is expected to stand wholly with Eleftherios Venizelos or wholly against him, wholly with Byzantium or wholly with the Enlightenment, wholly nationalist or wholly cosmopolitan.

The film seems anxious that acknowledging Kapodistrias’ political rigidity, suspicion of constitutionalism, or deeply paternal conception of governance might somehow diminish his patriotism. In reality, these qualities constituted the foundation of his historical significance. The tragedy of his life lies precisely in the fact that the same severity that enabled him to construct institutions also isolated him politically and contributed to his destruction.

Such tensions might have yielded genuinely profound cinema. Instead, the film retreats into solemnity and symbolic posture. As in much contemporary Greek heritage cinema, stillness masquerades as seriousness while reverence displaces psychological inquiry. The camera venerates where it ought to interrogate.

This problem extends beyond narrative into performance itself. Much of the acting throughout the film possesses the rigid declamatory quality characteristic of nationalist theatre, school commemorations, and state anniversary pageantry. Dialogue is delivered with immense rhetorical gravity though rarely with emotional spontaneity. One senses actors performing historical significance rather than inhabiting political personalities shaped by fear, exhaustion, pride, calculation, and ideological conflict.

The treatment of Kapodistrias’ relationship with Roxandra Sturdza exemplifies this weakness especially clearly. Historically, their bond appears to have been marked by emotional restraint and renunciation. The film instead renders it through the language of decorative romantic melancholy, reducing a psychologically complex relationship into sentimental accompaniment for the hero’s suffering.

Scenes unfold with ceremonial stiffness, as though trapped beneath the burden of their own symbolic importance. Grief appears choreographed. Anger emerges as theatrical emphasis rather than psychological eruption. Even moments intended to convey intimacy possess an oddly embalmed quality, leaving the viewer with the impression of observing a commemorative tableau rather than living human beings caught within historical catastrophe.

Yet the problem ultimately lies less with the actors themselves than with the film’s broader conception of history. Characters function primarily as embodiments of patriotism, sacrifice, treachery, or loyalty rather than psychologically unstable individuals shaped by contradiction and inner conflict.

In this respect, the film exemplifies a broader crisis within Greek historical filmmaking. Since the decline of the New Greek Cinema with its political experimentation, ambiguity, and formal daring, much contemporary Greek historical cinema has retreated into heritage spectacle and commemorative piety. Historical figures become monuments to be maintained. To reimagine them critically appears almost profane.

The irony is that the film diminishes Kapodistrias through excessive admiration. The historical figure who emerges from diplomatic correspondence, memoirs, and biographies is far more formidable than the cinematic version. Contemporary observers frequently described him as austere, suspicious, emotionally distant, and incapable of compromise. Spyridon Trikoupis remarked upon his distrust of independent political actors and his excessive concentration of authority. He inspired admiration precisely because he possessed immense force of personality, though he also generated fear and resentment for the same reason.

The film largely evacuates these tensions. Political conflict becomes reassurance rather than inquiry. This perhaps explains the divide between critical and popular reception. Critics have objected to the film’s hagiographic simplifications, while audiences have embraced its patriotic sincerity and emotional certainty.

Ultimately, Kapodistrias exposes a deeper exhaustion within Greek cinematic representation itself. Greece remains a culture profoundly attached to its historical inheritance though frequently hesitant to interpret it creatively. Historical cinema consequently becomes trapped between pedagogy and paralysis, unable fully to dramatise the figures it claims to honour because genuine dramatisation would require accepting contradiction within a national self image that brooks no such introspection.

The film, unable to endure ambiguity, transforms Kapodistrias into a monolith, though ironically statues of the founding father remain relatively few across the modern Greek landscape itself. In doing so, it reduces a deeply complex historical figure into an object of reverence, leaving the viewer confronting not the tragedy of Kapodistrias himself, but the continuing inability of Greek historical culture to imagine its past outside the confines of moral absolutism, diasporic insecurity, and ceremonial memory.

DEAN KALIMNIOU

kalymnios@hotmail.com

First published in NKEE on Saturday 23 May 2026

Saturday, May 16, 2026

GENOCIDE, CYPRUS, AND THE LIMITS OF GREEK RECOGNITION

 


In recent years, genocide recognition has re-entered public discourse with renewed intensity, as parliamentary resolutions, commemorative days and, in relation to genocides perpetrated during the final decades of the Ottoman Empire, official statements have multiplied, frequently framed as overdue acts of historical responsibility. Cyprus’ recognition of the Assyrian genocide in December 2025 forms part of this broader pattern, just as Armenia’s decision in 2015 to recognise the Armenian genocide alongside the genocides of the Greeks and Assyrians belongs to the same trajectory. These developments are often described as symbolic gestures, yet their effect extends well beyond symbolism, shaping how the past is narrated, determining which histories acquire institutional visibility, and establishing the boundaries within which responsibility is acknowledged.
Greece occupies a distinctive position within this evolving landscape, having recognised the Armenian genocide since 1996 while also legislating separate days of remembrance for the genocide of the Greeks of the Ottoman Empire, divided by region and historical episode. Over time, this framework has come to be treated as settled, with public discourse presenting it as comprehensive and internally sufficient. The absence of formal recognition of the Assyrian genocide rarely intrudes upon this settlement and, when it does, the matter is generally treated as peripheral, external to the core narrative of Greek remembrance. Considered alongside developments elsewhere, however, the limits of this arrangement begin to emerge with increasing clarity.
The destruction of Armenians, Greeks, and Assyrians during the final decades of the Ottoman Empire and the early years of the Turkish nation-state unfolded within a shared historical horizon. Language, ecclesiastical tradition, and local history distinguished the populations targeted, yet the political logic that marked them for removal remained consistent. Deportation, massacre, starvation, forced conversion, expropriation, and cultural erasure recur across the historical record with striking regularity, demonstrating that these events did not arise as isolated eruptions of violence confined to particular regions, but formed part of a sustained effort to reorder population, territory, and sovereignty through the elimination of communities identified as incompatible with a reconfigured political order.
Continuity of this kind has long been recognised in historical and analytical accounts of the period, in which late Ottoman violence against Christian populations is increasingly understood as a connected process with multiple targets rather than as a series of parallel tragedies. Armenia’s recognition of the Greek and Assyrian genocides reflects acceptance of this reading, situating Armenian destruction within a wider field of violence rather than isolating it as a singular national event, while Cyprus’ recognition of the Assyrian genocide proceeds from a similar understanding, affirming the centrality of the Assyrian experience within the transformations of the period.
A different orientation is evident in Greece’s recognition regime. By dividing the genocide of Ottoman Greeks into regionally bounded commemorations, a logic of segmentation is introduced that sits uneasily with the historical record and, over time, produces interpretive effects that are difficult to ignore. Violence comes to appear regional rather than systemic, causation drifts toward circumstance and away from structure, and attention settles on local suffering as the machinery that produced it recedes from view.
Fragmentation of this kind is often defended as an effort to respect the particular histories of different Greek communities. Genocide, however, as a historical phenomenon, is defined by intent, coordination, and repetition, and an emphasis on division reshapes explanation accordingly, allowing coherence to give way to compartmentalisation and rendering the underlying logic of destruction increasingly difficult to apprehend.
An additional irony follows from this practice. Late Ottoman violence was administered through systems of communal classification, most notably the millet system, which rendered populations legible as discrete and governable units. These taxonomies, frequently structured along religious lines, enabled surveillance, differentiation, and ultimately destruction, while modern recognition regimes that reproduce such compartmentalisation risk extending into memory the same administrative logic that once enabled annihilation in practice, filtering the destruction of pluralism through the very categories that facilitated its undoing.
The persistence of this problem is further revealed in the reluctance to name the shared condition binding Armenians, Greeks, and Assyrians during this period. Late Ottoman violence targeted Christian minorities as such, even as it differentiated between them administratively, and a preference for ethnonational framing avoids this shared designation, allowing Greek suffering to be narrated in isolation while Assyrian suffering remains external, with the classificatory mindset of empire surviving, inadvertently, within the structures of post-imperial remembrance.
The absence of formal recognition of the Assyrian genocide within the Greek framework therefore cannot be accounted for by evidentiary uncertainty and instead demands explanation at the level of structure and policy. The Assyrian experience unfolded contemporaneously with the Armenian and Greek genocides, its execution relied upon the same methods, and its justification drew upon the same ideological vocabulary, so that exclusion reflects a boundary drawn outside the historical record, revealing how recognition regimes distinguish between central and peripheral histories and how genocide becomes legible only when attached to populations capable of translating destruction into state continuity.
This pattern exposes a persistent problem identified within post-colonial and genocide scholarship alike, namely that modern recognition regimes privilege survivorship over destruction. Populations that emerge from genocide with a successor state acquire diplomatic legibility, while populations whose destruction was more thorough, or whose dispersal left no state apparatus capable of inheriting their claims, struggle to secure institutional acknowledgement, with the absence of an Assyrian state able to convert annihilation into diplomatic continuity rendering Assyrian genocide structurally vulnerable to marginalisation.
When Greece, a state that draws upon genocide recognition within its own historical narrative, declines to recognise the Assyrian experience, this structural asymmetry is reinforced. Silence acquires meaning, informal thresholds are confirmed, and a hierarchy of victimhood takes shape that sits uneasily alongside the universalist language through which genocide recognition is ordinarily justified, rendering the Assyrian genocide a test case that exposes the limits of recognition governed by national self-narration rather than historical adjudication.
These limits extend into the diasporan sphere, where Greek, Armenian, and Assyrian communities frequently pursue recognition within the same political environments, addressing the same parliaments, institutions, and publics. Unified approaches have at times strengthened these efforts by presenting late Ottoman violence as a shared historical process rather than as a set of competing claims, yet Greece’s fragmented recognition regime undermines this possibility, as separate commemorations and selective silences encourage parallel advocacy cultures that reduce the scope for coordination and weaken solidarities that might otherwise consolidate recognition.
The consequences of this fragmentation are practical and cumulative. Diasporan recognition efforts depend upon clarity, particularly when engaging audiences unfamiliar with the region’s history, and fragmented frameworks shift explanatory burdens onto communities already operating at the margins of political influence, allowing momentum to dissipate and recognition to become harder to secure even where moral and historical grounds are substantial. Delay itself acquires a structuring force, as prolonged absence from official recognition normalises erasure, embeds silence into institutional expectation, and renders any later corrective gesture increasingly provisional, defensive, and burdened by the weight of what has already been allowed to settle.
At the level of institutions, similar effects emerge. Legislators and international bodies are more likely to engage where historical frameworks appear intelligible and internally consistent, while fragmentation complicates engagement by introducing overlapping commemorations and selective omissions that invite hesitation, delay recognition, and benefit denial. A further analytical distinction clarifies the difficulty, since legal recognition requires precision, definition, and bounded categories, while historical recognition requires continuity and context, with Greece’s approach privileging juridical compartmentalisation at the expense of historical intelligibility, achieving administrative clarity at the cost of conceptual coherence.
In this sense, recognition operates not only as a juridical act but also as a pedagogical one, quietly determining which histories enter curricula, museums, public institutions, and the inherited common sense of future generations, and which are left to survive only within the fragile confines of communal memory, as state recognition continues to shape what institutions study, teach, and litigate, ensuring that silence in the present becomes marginalisation in the future.
Fragmentation also carries a reflexive cost, as a recognition regime organised through selective segmentation and administrative division begins, over time, to mirror the very logic of differentiation and isolation upon which denial has long depended, thereby weakening Greece’s own capacity to contest that logic with coherence.
Recognition is never confined to the past. It establishes the terms on which a state understands its own history and presents that understanding to others, and although Greece may not pursue genocide recognition through sustained lobbying, this does not relieve it of the obligation to maintain conceptual and moral consistency in its recognition regime. Where recognition fragments what history presents as connected, credibility erodes, and where recognition excludes a population destroyed within a shared historical process, coherence fails, since a state’s recognition policy cannot demand clarity from others while tolerating ambiguity within itself.
DEAN KALIMNIOU
kalymnios@hotmail.com
First published in NKEE on Saturday 16 May 2026

Saturday, May 09, 2026

LOST IN TRANSLITERATION: WHO GETS TO BE GREEK ON PAPER?

 



My interlocutor relates the anecdote with an ease that borders upon resignation, as though the outcome were always already inscribed within the prejudices of the system he sought to enter. A communications contract at a large corporate conglomerate, a role predicated upon nuance, articulation, and the capacity to mediate between complexity and comprehension. The application is submitted under his legal Greek name. It is declined without ceremony. The identical curriculum vitae, unaltered in substance, untouched in merit, is resubmitted under a truncated, Australianised version of his name. Within thirty minutes, the telephone stirs into life. Interest is immediate, enthusiasm unfeigned, opportunity suddenly abundant.
Such an episode might readily be subsumed within the now familiar literature on implicit bias, wherein names operate as proxies for cultural legibility, rendering the bearer either proximate to or distant from the imagined norms of the dominant order. Within this framework, the Anglicised name functions as a form of symbolic translation, smoothing the friction of difference, permitting entry into what Pierre Bourdieu would describe as the domain of legitimate language, where recognition is contingent upon conformity to established codes. The transformation not merely being phonetic is social, conferring upon its bearer a degree of symbolic capital otherwise withheld.
Yet to confine the analysis to this outward dynamic is to overlook an inobtrusive, more disquieting process unfolding within the Greek-Australian community itself. For there exists, within the pages of Greek language publications in Australia, a reverse operation of naming, whereby individuals of Greek origin, particularly those of the second and third generations, are habitually presented through their Anglicised appellations. The effect is neither incidental nor merely stylistic, constituting, rather, a subtle act of classification, one that inscribes distinctions of belonging within a linguistic space ostensibly dedicated to the preservation of Hellenic continuity.
The evidence is not difficult to locate. Steve Dimopoulos appears as Steve, (albeit also as the odd Στηβ on occasion). Nick Staikos is rendered as Nick, not Νίκος. His Honour Justice Christopher Kourakis retains his English form, rather than Χριστόφορος Κουράκης, even within a Greek textual environment that would permit, indeed invite, such a rendering. Here the argument of necessity or constraint does not apply. Instead, these renderings appear to be conscious editorial choices, repeated with sufficient consistency to suggest an underlying logic, a tacit grammar of inclusion and distance.
A parallel tendency may be observed within Greece itself, where figures of the diaspora are frequently designated by their international names, as though their distance from the national body requires a linguistic marker of differentiation. Maria Callas and Maria Menounos circulate only in English form with a persistence that exceeds mere convention, their global renown intertwined with the retention of a form that signals their emplacement within a broader, non-Greek sphere. The gesture, subtle yet insistent, participates in a form of exoticisation, a rendering of the diasporic subject as at once Greek and other, familiar yet estranged.
Within the Australian context, the implications are more layered, for the practice unfolds within a community that proclaims, with ritual regularity, its commitment to the preservation and transmission of language, culture, and identity. The rhetoric of continuity is omnipresent, articulated in speeches, commemorations, wreath laying ceremonies and institutional discourse, wherein the Greek language is elevated to the status of inheritance, obligation and fetish object. One encounters, within this discourse, an almost liturgical insistence upon the necessity of retention, the safeguarding of a cultural patrimony perceived to be under constant threat of erosion.
And yet, within the very medium through which this patrimony is articulated, a different logic asserts itself. The rendering of Greek names in English, within Greek language publications, introduces a dissonance that cannot be easily dismissed. It compels the question of how Greekness is being conceptualised, mediated, and, crucially, authorised within the diasporic field.
Here, the insights of Bourdieu acquire particular resonance. The Greek language press may be understood as a field in which symbolic capital is distributed and legitimised, wherein the authority to define the terms of Greekness is exercised through ostensibly mundane practices such as naming. To render a name in Greek is to confer a form of recognition, to inscribe the individual within the legitimate linguistic order of the community. To retain the English form, within that same space, is to position the subject at a slight remove, acknowledged yet not fully consecrated within the symbolic economy of Hellenism.
This classificatory logic is not accidental nor is it externally imposed. Drawing upon Michel Foucault’s notion of governmentality, one discerns within these practices a form of internal regulation, a mode of communal self-administration through which norms are reproduced without the need for overt coercion. The Greek-Australian community, through its own institutions, curates and disciplines its boundaries, producing a regime of truth about who is to be recognised as fully Greek, and under what conditions. The use of English names within Greek discourse thus emerges as a subtle technology of differentiation, a means by which degrees of belonging are quietly articulated.
The pattern acquires further clarity when one considers its inconsistencies. Figures who occupy prominent roles within the organised Greek-Australian community, regardless of which generation they belong to are far more likely to be designated by their Greek names. In these instances, the act of naming functions as a form of symbolic consecration, affirming their position within the institutional life of the community.
By contrast, those Greek Australians who achieve prominence within the mainstream, yet remain less embedded within communal structures, are frequently presented through their Anglicised names. The distinction, reveals an underlying taxonomy of Greekness, one that is not merely inherited but is mediated through participation, proximity, and recognition. Greekness, in this schema, rather than being a static attribute, is actualy a status conferred within a particular field of relations.
The work of Vassilacopoulos and Nicolacopoulou offers a useful extension of this analysis. If the Greek migrant in Australia is positioned within the national imaginary as a perpetual foreigner, compelled to navigate a space in which full recognition remains elusive, then within the Greek diasporic field a parallel stratification emerges. Degrees of Greekness are differentially acknowledged, authorised, and inscribed, producing a secondary hierarchy in which the criteria of belonging are determined internally, even as the community negotiates its place within the broader society. Here, the subversives are those of the latter generations who would assert their own forms of Greekness challenging the rule and role of a ruling class that has established itself through their quiescence in the dominant groups seizure of the land from its original inhabitants.
One might inquire whether such practices serve to alienate subsequent generations, reinforcing a sense of distance from a linguistic and cultural heritage already experienced as attenuated. The answer, though less dramatic than one might expect, is no less revealing. The audience most directly implicated in these representational practices often lacks the linguistic capital necessary to engage with them. Greek language publications in Australia remain largely inaccessible to those whose competence in the language is limited. The discourse, therefore, circulates within a relatively closed circuit, its classificatory effects largely unchallenged by those it implicitly positions at the margins.
This asymmetry of linguistic capital entrenches the authority of the first generation, whose fluency grants them control over the mechanisms of representation. The capacity to name, to classify, to inscribe identity within the written word, becomes a form of power, exercised with little contestation. In this sense, the practice of rendering names in English within Greek discourse is not simply a reflection of external realities, but an expression of internal hierarchies, sustained by differential access to language itself.
At the same time, the phenomenon resists reduction to a singular logic of exclusion. The persistence of English names within Greek publications may also be read through the lens of Homi Bhabha’s notion of hybridity, wherein identity is constituted within an in between space, neither wholly assimilated nor entirely preserved. The Anglicised name, retained within a Greek textual environment, signals this condition of partial translation, a form that is at once familiar and estranged, bearing the marks of both worlds without collapsing into either.
Such hybridity, far from representing a failure of continuity, reflects the lived reality of a community that has, over generations, adapted to its context, negotiating the demands of integration while sustaining elements of its cultural inheritance. The English name, in this reading, becomes less a marker of loss than a sign of transformation, an acknowledgment, however implicit, that Greekness in Australia has evolved beyond the parameters established by the first generation.
The anecdote with which this reflection commenced returns, at this juncture, with renewed significance. The substitution of a Greek name for an English one in order to secure employment speaks to the external pressures exerted upon minority identities, the necessity of translation in order to access opportunity. The retention of English names within Greek discourse, by contrast, reveals an internal accommodation, a recognition that the boundaries of identity have shifted, that the community itself participates in the reconfiguration of what it means to be Greek.
Between these movements, outward and inward, lies the space in which Greek-Australian identity continues to be fashioned. Names, in this context, are neither incidental nor merely descriptive. They are instruments through which belonging is negotiated, affirmed, and, at times, withheld. They bear witness to a community engaged in an ongoing process of self-definition, one that unfolds in the interstices between languages, generations, and competing imaginaries of what Greekness has been and what it is becoming.
The English name, printed within the columns of a Greek newspaper, stands as a quiet testament to this transformation. It signals, with a subtlety that borders upon the unconscious, the emergence of a hybrid identity that is neither fully assimilated nor entirely preserved, an identity that the community, through its everyday practices, has already begun to accept, even as it continues to speak, with undiminished fervour, of continuity and preservation.
DEAN KALIMNIOU
kalymnios@hotmail.com
First published in NKEE on Saturday, 9 May 2026