In this volume, K.S. Brown and Yannis Hamilakis bring together scholars
of history, archaeology, and anthropology to explore the located and
contextual nature of historical narratives. The contributors analyze
contested historic rituals, building styles, and traditions-looking
through the unique lens of twentieth-century Greek identity-paying
particular attention to the ways these social phenomena and cultural
artifacts manifest tension between 'official' and 'unofficial'
narratives of the past. Though focused on the changing historical basis
of Greek culture and identity, this work further serves as an important
theoretical contemplation of how our view of the past is shaped by our
relationship with the present.