This volume explores the ways local communities perceive, experience,
and interact with archaeological sites in Greece, as well as with the
archaeologists and government officials who construct and study such
places. In so doing, it reveals another side to sites that have been
revered as both birthplace of Western civilization and basis of the
modern Greek nation. The conceptual terrain of those who live near such
sites is complex and furrowed with ambivalence, confusion, and
resentment. For many local residents, these sites are gated enclaves,
unexplained and off limits, except when workers are needed.