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Crossing the Aegean

Crossing the Aegean

Renée Hirschon

(2003)

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Abstract

Following the defeat of the Greek Army in 1922 by nationalist Turkish forces, the 1923 Lausanne Convention specified the first internationally ratified compulsory population exchange. It proved to be a watershed in the eastern Mediterranean, having far-reaching ramifications both for the new Turkish Republic, and for Greece which hadto absorb over a million refugees. Known as the Asia Minor Catastrophe by the Greeks, it marked the establishment of the independent nation state for the Turks. The consequences of this event have received surprisingly little attention despite the considerable relevance for the contemporary situation in the Balkans. This volume addresses the challenge of writing history from both sides of the Aegean and provides, for the first time, a forum for multidisciplinary dialogue across national boundaries.


Renée Hirschon was educated at the universities of Cape Town, Chicago and Oxford. Intensive fieldwork among the Asia Minor refugees settled in Piraeus resulted in the monograph "Heirs of the Greek Catastrophe". She has been Senior Lecturer at Oxford Brookes University, and Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of the Aegean. She is currently Senior Research Fellow at St Peter's College University of Oxford, Senior Member at St Antony's College University of Oxford and Research Associate at the Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Oxford.


"This volume is a long overdue endeavour to tackle the thorny and delicate issue of the compulsory population exchange…The argumentative force of the volume lies in the careful analysis of the contradictory and ambiguous ramifications of the convention." -The Greek Review of Social Research

Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Title Page iii
Table of Contents v
Lists vii
Notes on Terminology and Orthography xi
Preface xiv
Acknowledgements xviii
Part I- Introduction: Background and Overview 1
Chapter 1- ‘Unmixing Peoples’ in the Aegean Region 3
Chapter 2- The Consequences of the Lausanne Convention 13
Part II- Political, Economic and Policy Aspects 21
Chapter 3- Lausanne Revisited: POPULATION EXCHANGES IN INTERNATIONAL LAW AND POLICY 23
Chapter 4- The Consequences of the Exchange of Populations for Turkey 39
Chapter 5- 1922: Political Continuations and Realignments in the Greek State 53
Chapter 6- Economic Consequences following Refugee Settlement in Greek Macedonia, 1923–1932 63
Chapter 7- Homogenising the Nation, Turkifying the Economy: THE TURKISH EXPERIENCE OF POPULATION EXCHANGE RECONSIDERED 79
Chapter 8- The Story of Those Who Stayed: LESSONS FROM ARTICLES 1 AND 2 OF THE 1923 CONVENTION 97
Chapter 9- Religion or Ethnicity: THE IDENTITY ISSUE OF THE MINORITIES IN GREECE AND TURKEY 117
Chapter 10- Inter-war Town Planning and the Refugee Problem in Greece: TEMPORARY ‘SOLUTIONS’ AND LONG-TERM DYSFUNCTIONS 133
Chapter 11- When Greeks Meet Other Greeks: SETTLEMENT POLICY ISSUES IN THE CONTEMPORARY GREEK CONTEXT 145
Parrt III- Social and Cultural Aspects 161
Chapter 12- Housing and the Architectural Expression of Asia Minor Greeks Before and After 1923 163
Chapter 13- Space, Place and Identity: MEMORY AND RELIGION IN TWO CAPPADOCIAN GREEK SETTLEMENTS 179
Chapter 14- Lessons in Refugeehood: THE EXPERIENCE OF FORCED MIGRANTS IN TURKEY 193
Chapter 15- Muslim Cretans in Turkey: THE REFORMULATION OF ETHNIC IDENTITY IN AN AEGEAN COMMUNITY 209
Chapter 16- The Exchange of Populations in Turkish Literature: THE UNDERTONE OF TEXTS 221
Chapter 17- The Myth of Asia Minor in Greek Fiction 235
Chapter 18- Between Orientalism and Occidentalism: THE CONTRIBUTION OF ASIA MINOR REFUGEES TO GREEK POPULAR SONG, AND ITS RECEPTION 247
References 261
Appendix 281
Index 289