Acknowledgments
Introduction: Contested Antiquity in Greece and Cyprus
Part I: Between nationalism, colonialism and crypto-colonialism: Historical perspectives and current implications
1. Hellas Mon Amour: Revisiting Greece's National "Sites of Trauma"
2. Archaeology and Politics in the Inter-War Period: The Swedish Excavations at Asine
3. Contested Perceptions of Archaeological Sites in Cyprus: Communities and their Claims on their Past
4. Pressed On in Press: Greek Cultural Heritage in the Public Eye: The Post-War Years
Part II: Spatial metaphors and ethnographic observations: heritage, memory and dissonance
5. The Gentrification of Memory: The Past as a Social Event in Thessaloniki of the Early Twenty-first Century
6. The Oracle of Dodona: Contestation over a "Sacred" Archaeological Landscape
7. Archaeological "Protection Zones" and the Limits of the Possible: Archaeological Law, Abandonment and Contested Spaces in Greece
Part III: Competing pasts
8. Heritage as Obstacle: Or Which View to the Acropolis?
9. Eptapyrgio, a Modern Prison inside a World Heritage Monument: Raw Memories in the Margins of Archaeology
10. Contemporary Art and "Difficult Heritage": Three Case Studies from Athens
Endnote
Index