Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Forgetting Greekness in Romola

View through CrossRef
Abstract Critics have uncovered many relevant contexts to further our understanding of Romola, from fifteenth-century Florentine politics and Piero di Cosimo’s Higher Primitivism to Eliot’s quarry and Leighton’s illustrations. In this article, I look at a previously understudied context that is crucial to our understanding of Romola: the Turkish conquest of former Greek territories in the fifteenth century. I show that, in Romola, following the Turkish conquest, an amnesia surrounds all things Greek (from Tito and Baldassare to Greek churches), and I argue that this amnesia is ideologically motivated in the aftermath of the Crimean War during which Britain was an ally of the Ottomans against Greek interests. Ultimately, this insight helps us see that for Romola, artworks are the true bearers of history even in the face of ideological erasure.
The Pennsylvania State University Press
Title: Forgetting Greekness in Romola
Description:
Abstract Critics have uncovered many relevant contexts to further our understanding of Romola, from fifteenth-century Florentine politics and Piero di Cosimo’s Higher Primitivism to Eliot’s quarry and Leighton’s illustrations.
In this article, I look at a previously understudied context that is crucial to our understanding of Romola: the Turkish conquest of former Greek territories in the fifteenth century.
I show that, in Romola, following the Turkish conquest, an amnesia surrounds all things Greek (from Tito and Baldassare to Greek churches), and I argue that this amnesia is ideologically motivated in the aftermath of the Crimean War during which Britain was an ally of the Ottomans against Greek interests.
Ultimately, this insight helps us see that for Romola, artworks are the true bearers of history even in the face of ideological erasure.

Related Results

“Her soul cried out for some explanation”: Knowledge and Acknowledgment in George Eliot's Romola
“Her soul cried out for some explanation”: Knowledge and Acknowledgment in George Eliot's Romola
This article argues that in Romola, George Eliot uses the real, historical case of Savonarola, whose motivations remain unknowable in the novel and historical record alike, to inve...
George Eliot’s and George Henry Lewes’s Copies of Her Work
George Eliot’s and George Henry Lewes’s Copies of Her Work
Abstract Lot 529 of the Sotheby’s 27 June 1923, sale of George Eliot’s and George Henry Lewes’s work consisted of: “Eliot (George) Scenes of Clerical Life, 2 vols., ...
Memory and Forgetting in Lisa Appignanesi’S the Memory Man
Memory and Forgetting in Lisa Appignanesi’S the Memory Man
Abstract The aim of this paper is to look at Lisa Appignanesi’s novel The memory man ([2004] 2005), which won the 2005 Holocaust Literature Award, and examine the pa...
Segundo de Chomón, un guía turístico de cine.
Segundo de Chomón, un guía turístico de cine.
Desde sus orígenes el cine ha sido un poderoso creador de imaginarios sobre las culturas y los países del mundo. Por lo mismo, ha contribuido a configurar la imagen de España como ...
Art for October: Thai Cold War State Violence in Trauma Art
Art for October: Thai Cold War State Violence in Trauma Art
The visual artwork produced about Thai contemporary political trauma constitutes a “trauma art” expressing a politics of loss—loss of life, loss of history, and loss of leftist mem...
Henry James, Affect and the Writer/Researcher in the Academy
Henry James, Affect and the Writer/Researcher in the Academy
In this paper I am going to examine the role of the fiction writer/academic in university writing programs, especially the way in which they wear numerous research hats. Multi-skil...
Editors' welcome, PORTAL, Vol 7, No 1, January 2010
Editors' welcome, PORTAL, Vol 7, No 1, January 2010
‘Fields of Remembrace,’ is a special issue of PORTAL Journal of Multidisciplinary International Studies guest-edited by Matthew Graves (University of Provence) and Elizabeth Reznie...

Back to Top