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Full Description
From 1967 to 1974, the military junta ruling Greece attempted a dramatic reshaping of the nation, implementing ideas and policies that left a lasting mark on both domestic affairs and international relations. Bringing together leading scholars from a range of disciplines, The Greek Military Dictatorship explores the junta's attempts to impose authoritarian rule upon a rapidly modernizing country while navigating a complex international landscape. Focusing both on foreign relations as well as domestic matters such as economics, ideology, religion, culture and education, this book offers a fresh and well-researched study of a key period in modern Greek history.
Contents
List of Illustrations
Foreword and Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Greek Military Junta's Exceptionalism in a Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Othon Anastasakis and Katerina Lagos
Part I: Historical and Ideological Background
Chapter 1. The Greek Army in Politics, 1935-67
André Gerolymatos
Chapter 2. The Political and Ideological Origins of the Ethnosotirios Epanastasis
Katerina Lagos
Part II: Domestic Affairs
Chapter 3. Economic Policy under the Greek Dictatorship
Andreas Kakridis
Chapter 4. Foreign Investment under the Greek Military Regime: The American Experience
Nicholas James Kalogerakos
Chapter 5. "Patient in a Cast": How the Greek Military Regime Traumatised Education
Othon Anastasakis
Chapter 6. Can Dead Poets Speak Back?: C. P. Cavafy, Cold War Propaganda, and the Greek Dictatorship
Foteini Dimirouli
Chapter 7. Religion Enchained: The Church of Greece under the Military Junta
Charalampos Andreopoulos and Athanasios Grammenos
Part III: External Affairs
Chapter 8. Uneasy Alliances: Archbishop Iakovos and the Greek Colonels' Dictatorship
Alexander Kitroeff
Chapter 9. Uncle Sam Regrets: The United States and the Greek Coup of April 1967
James Edward Miller
Chapter 10. Britain, Europe, and the Greek Junta: "Business as Usual"
Alexandros Nafpliotis
Chapter 11. West Germany's Policy toward Greece during the Junta-Period in the Context of "Burden-Sharing"
Mogens Pelt
Chapter 12. The Greek Military Regime and the Cyprus Question
John Sakkas
Conclusions: The 1974 Moment of Rupture and the Legacies of a Discredited Past
Othon Anastasakis and Katerina Lagos
Index