• Poet and Professor Yiorgos Anagnostou

  • Mar 23 2024
  • Durata: 1 ora e 8 min
  • Podcast
Poet and Professor Yiorgos Anagnostou copertina

Poet and Professor Yiorgos Anagnostou

  • Riassunto

  • Edited from a Zoom chat recorded on Thursday, January 19, 2023, with hosts Vassiliki Rapti and Peter Bottéas.


    This Diasporic Space: Creative Renderings, Critical Reflections

    Yiorgos Anagnostou is a Professor and the Director of the Modern Greek Program at The Ohio State University. His research interests include modern Greek studies and American ethnic studies, with a focus on Greek America. His published research covers a broad range of subjects, including film, documentary, ethnography, folklore, literature, history, sociology, and public humanities. He is the author of Contours of White Ethnicity: Popular Ethnography and the Making of Usable Pasts in Greek America (Ohio University Press, 2009), and has published two collections of poetry. Since 2017, he has been the editor of the online journal Ergon: Greek/American Arts and Letters, which features Greek-American scholarship, poetry and essays (http://ergon.scienzine.com/), and he writes regularly for the Greek and Greek-American media.

    Yiorgos’ work is primarily devoted to academic renderings of immigration and diaspora. He strives to explore and experiment with diasporic poetics as a space that is hospitable to bilingualism, the blurring of genres, word play, the creative subversion of norms, and immigrant subjectivity.

    Today’s conversation, entitled “This Diasporic Space: Creative Renderings, Critical Reflections,” explores two genres of what the author refers to as “writing diasporas”: poetic and scholarly. Though they tend to be separated into different categories—one creative the other analytical—poetic and academic diasporic writings share a fundamental commonality: they produce knowledge about the diasporic space within which they operate, shaping the understanding of it through placing their authors’ position within it. He explores what diasporic writers could possibly gain by creating dialogue between poetic and scholarly work. He undertakes this reflection from his position as an immigrant/diasporic writer, as well as a scholar of diasporic expression, turning his own creative writing into an object of analytical commentary.
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    This podcast series, “Borders Unbound: The Poetry of the Hellenic Diaspora and Beyond,” was produced by Citizen TALES Commons, and is the recipient of a 2022 Modern Greek Studies Association Innovation Fund Grant. We gratefully acknowledge the support of the Modern Greek Studies Association and the members of the Citizen TALES Diaspora Studies Consortium: the Hellenic American Project at Queens College (part of the City University of New York); the Institute for Eastern Mediterranean Studies at Emmanuel College in Boston; and Citizen TALES Commons, a multidisciplinary collective of translators, artists, ludics learners, explorers, and storytellers, founded and directed by Vassiliki Rapti.

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Sintesi dell'editore

Edited from a Zoom chat recorded on Thursday, January 19, 2023, with hosts Vassiliki Rapti and Peter Bottéas.


This Diasporic Space: Creative Renderings, Critical Reflections

Yiorgos Anagnostou is a Professor and the Director of the Modern Greek Program at The Ohio State University. His research interests include modern Greek studies and American ethnic studies, with a focus on Greek America. His published research covers a broad range of subjects, including film, documentary, ethnography, folklore, literature, history, sociology, and public humanities. He is the author of Contours of White Ethnicity: Popular Ethnography and the Making of Usable Pasts in Greek America (Ohio University Press, 2009), and has published two collections of poetry. Since 2017, he has been the editor of the online journal Ergon: Greek/American Arts and Letters, which features Greek-American scholarship, poetry and essays (http://ergon.scienzine.com/), and he writes regularly for the Greek and Greek-American media.

Yiorgos’ work is primarily devoted to academic renderings of immigration and diaspora. He strives to explore and experiment with diasporic poetics as a space that is hospitable to bilingualism, the blurring of genres, word play, the creative subversion of norms, and immigrant subjectivity.

Today’s conversation, entitled “This Diasporic Space: Creative Renderings, Critical Reflections,” explores two genres of what the author refers to as “writing diasporas”: poetic and scholarly. Though they tend to be separated into different categories—one creative the other analytical—poetic and academic diasporic writings share a fundamental commonality: they produce knowledge about the diasporic space within which they operate, shaping the understanding of it through placing their authors’ position within it. He explores what diasporic writers could possibly gain by creating dialogue between poetic and scholarly work. He undertakes this reflection from his position as an immigrant/diasporic writer, as well as a scholar of diasporic expression, turning his own creative writing into an object of analytical commentary.
____________

This podcast series, “Borders Unbound: The Poetry of the Hellenic Diaspora and Beyond,” was produced by Citizen TALES Commons, and is the recipient of a 2022 Modern Greek Studies Association Innovation Fund Grant. We gratefully acknowledge the support of the Modern Greek Studies Association and the members of the Citizen TALES Diaspora Studies Consortium: the Hellenic American Project at Queens College (part of the City University of New York); the Institute for Eastern Mediterranean Studies at Emmanuel College in Boston; and Citizen TALES Commons, a multidisciplinary collective of translators, artists, ludics learners, explorers, and storytellers, founded and directed by Vassiliki Rapti.

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