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Dangerous Citizens
The Greek Left and the Terror of the State
Neni Panourgiá
$27.00
ISBN: 9780823229680
Book (Paperback)
Fordham University Press
256 pages
16 black and white illustrations
September 2009



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HONORABLE MENTION IN ARCHEOLOGY & ANTHROPOLOGY
2009 PROSE AWARDS

“Intimate, fascinating, and inventively analytic. . . . A worthy and brilliant successor to Panourgiá’s much-acclaimed Fragments of Death, Fables of Identity: An Athenian Anthropography.”
George E. Marcus, University of California, Irvine

“A profound anthropological insight into the cultural ethos of the Greek families, deeply divided by brutal political conflict.”
Michael Löwy, Emeritus Research Director, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, CNRS, Paris, France

“A most challenging reflection about the presence of the past in society, Panourgiá’s new book relates the singular story of the Greek Left, bringing out its multiple voices and often conflicting narratives. In this ethnography, based both on the author’s past experiences and on extensive fieldwork in Athens, the narrator/anthropologist explores the tension between individual voices and collective representations and boldly confirms—again—that the writing of anthropology can always be an innovative experience.”
Maria Couroucli, Research Fellow CNRS, University of Paris-Ouest-Nanterre

Dangerous Citizens is a powerful and unforgettable book. It is at once a horrific history of nearly a century of state violence in Greece that few people may be aware of; a profound meditation on the conditions of possibility for both the idea and the reality of concentration camps; and a text that intertwines ethnography, history, and personal memoir to very powerful effect.”
Sherry Ortner, University of California, Los Angeles

This book simultaneously tells a story—or rather, stories—and a history. The stories are those of Greek Leftists as paradigmatic figures of abjection, given that between 1929 and 1974 tens of thousands of Greek dissidents were detained and tortured in prisons, places of exile, and concentration camps. They were sometimes held for decades, in subhuman conditions of toil and deprivation.

The history is that of how the Greek Left was constituted by the Greek state as a zone of danger. Legislation put in place in the early twentieth century postulated this zone. Once the zone was created, there was always the possibility—which came to be a horrific reality after the Greek Civil War of 1946 to 1949—that the state would populate it with its own citizens. Indeed, the Greek state started to do so in 1929, by identifying ever-increasing numbers of citizens as “Leftists” and persecuting them with means extending from indefinite detention to execution.

In a striking departure from conventional treatments, Neni Panourgiá places the Civil War in a larger historical context, within ruptures that have marked Greek society for centuries. She begins the story in 1929, when the Greek state set up numerous exile camps on isolated islands in the Greek archipelago. The legal justification for these camps drew upon laws reaching back to 1871—originally directed at controlling “brigands”—that allowed the death penalty for those accused and the banishment of their family members and anyone helping to conceal them. She ends with the 2004 trial of the Revolutionary Organization 17 November.

Drawing on years of fieldwork, Panourgiá uses ethnographic interviews, archival material, unpublished personal narratives, and memoirs of political prisoners and dissidents to piece together the various microhistories of a generation, stories that reveal how the modern Greek citizen was created as a fraught political subject.

Her book does more than give voice to feelings and experiences suppressed for decades. It establishes a history for the notion of indefinite detention that appeared as a legal innovation with the Bush administration. Part of its roots, Panourgiá shows, lie in the laboratory that Greece provided for neo-colonialism after the Truman Doctrine and under the Marshall Plan.

NENI PANOURGIÁ is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Columbia University. She has published Fragments of Death, Fables of Identity: An Athenian Anthropography, winner of the Grand Jury Prize of the International Society of Ethnohistory and co-winner of the Chicago Folklore Prize. She has co-edited, with George E. Marcus, the volume Ethnographica Moralia: Experiments in Interpretive Anthropology (Fordham).

Related Links:
Columbia University's CDRS presents an Interactive Version of Dangerous Citizens


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