Thirty years later – Rethinking Albanian-Greek identity

 Published On Streamed live on Dec 9, 2021

Albanians started migrating to Greece in the early 1990s following the fall of the communist regime in Albania and almost half a century of isolation from the rest of the world. Today, ethnic Albanians constitute approximately 5% of the population of Greece, with a large number of them being the children of those first-generation migrants.

In this Greek Studies Now roundtable we will explore what it means to be Albanian-Greek for those who were born in Greece or have migrated there at a young age, in light of the attitudes that the community has encountered. Although hyphenated identities are widely used in places such as the U.S., it seems that Greek society has been slow in adopting such designations and in recognizing the sociocultural complexity of the positions of Albanian-Greeks in present-day Greece.

The question of whether versions of Albanianness can be included in the way we think of Greek citizenship today has very rarely been addressed to those directly concerned. In this roundtable we aim to open up the space to ask our panellists if they feel included in Greece and what kind of relationship they have formed with the country. How do they relate to the ways they have been formed as subjects through dominant discourses in Greece? What counternarratives have they devised to speak back to these dominant discourses through literature, art, film, scholarship, philosophy or other fields and modes of expression? How do they approach the question of a hyphenated identity: does an Albanian-Greek identity exist, and if so, which conditions, inclusions, and exclusions have helped shape it or have undercut its formation? Is such a hyphenated identity necessary or desirable?

Confirmed speakers:

Eno Agolli (poet and philosopher, Rutgers University)
Ilira Aliaj (educator and translator)
Ervin Kondakciu (political scientist, Universities of Hamburg and Groningen)
Neritan Zinxhiria (film director)
Convened by Rexhina Ndoci (linguist, The Ohio State University) and Linda Xheza (media/cultural theorist), University of Amsterdam)

In the first part of this event, we will have brief presentations by the four main speakers. In the second part, we will open the floor for a live conversation with invited interlocutors from academic and activist communities as well as with the audience.

About the network:

“Greek Studies Now” is a Cultural Analysis network that emerged from a partnership between the departments of Modern Greek at Oxford and Amsterdam. It brings together scholars in several universities around the world and aims to progressively widen its reach to include more partners and countries. Our inaugural conference in Oxford (January 31- February 1, 2020) was the first meeting place for the formation of a dynamic network of scholars that has been growing ever since. Given the current restrictions that do not allow us to host face-to-face events, we continue the network’s activities with an online roundtable series and – if the situation allows it – a 2-day conference in Amsterdam in the spring of 2022.

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