Assistant Professor of Modern Greek and Comparative Literature
About
Personal Webpage
My forthcoming book, Literature's Refuge: Rewriting the Mediterranean Borderscape (Princeton University Press), walks readers through a mostly uncharted geography of refugee and diasporic literatures hiding in the chinks and crannies between Europe and the Middle East, pushed off the grid a century ago by the Greco-Turkish Population Exchange (1923-1925) and the modern border logic that it set in motion. From the status quo of this border regime, which marked the edges of Europe and West Asia, my book pries open a place for the displaced: refugee and diasporic literatures whose crossings have been forced underground by cultural institutions on both sides of the border. My case studies range from Arabic-script Greek (written by Greek-speaking Muslims uprooted from Greece) to Karamanli Turkish (Turkish written in the Greek script by Turkish-speaking Orthodox Christians uprooted from Turkey), from "highbrow" literature to the "lowbrow" ballads of handwritten commonplace books and reader marginalia.
Research Interests: Modern Greek Literature, Turkish Literature, Book History, Mediterranean Studies, Classical Reception, Materialism, Histories of the International Left
Publications
Peer-reviewed articles
Special Issues
1922-2022: A Century of Border Making and Refugeehood. Special Issue of the Journal of Modern Greek Studies (October 2022), edited by Kristina Gedgaudaitė and William Stroebel.
I would be delighted to work with graduate students interested in any facet of Greek or Turkish literature, Book History, Textual Criticism and Bibliography, Mediterranean Studies, Partitions and Border-Crossing, or Classical Reception in the modern Mediterranean.