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Orthokōstá : a novel /

Orthokostá : a novel / Thanassis Valtinos ; translated from the Greek by Jane Assimakopoulos and Stavros Deligiorgis ; foreword by Stathis N. Kalyvas = Orthokōstá : mythistorēma / Thanasēs Valtinos.

Βαλτινος, Θανασης, By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Original language: Greek, Modern (1453- ) Series: Margellos world republic of letters bookPublisher: New Haven : Yale University Press, [2016]Description: 1 online resource (264 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780300221039
  • 0300221037
Uniform titles: Ορθοκωστά. English Uniform titles:
  • Orthokōsta. English
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Orthokostá.DDC classification:
  • 889/.334 23
LOC classification:
  • PA5633.A4 O7713 2016eb
Online resources: Summary: First published in 1994 to a storm of controversy, Thanassis Valtinos's probing novel Orthokostá defied standard interpretations of the Greek Civil War. Through the documentary-style testimonies of multiple narrators, among them the previously unheard voices of right-wing collaborationists, Valtinos provides a powerful, nuanced interpretation of events during the later years of Nazi occupation and the early stages of the nation's Civil War. His fictionalized chronicle gives participants, victims, and innocent bystanders equal opportunity to bear witness to such events as the burning of Valtinos's home village, the detention and execution of combatants and civilians in the monastery of Orthokost, and the revenge killings that ensued. As a transforming work of literature, this book redefined established methods of fiction; as a work of revisionist history, it changed the way Greece understands its own past.
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Print version record.

First published in 1994 to a storm of controversy, Thanassis Valtinos's probing novel Orthokostá defied standard interpretations of the Greek Civil War. Through the documentary-style testimonies of multiple narrators, among them the previously unheard voices of right-wing collaborationists, Valtinos provides a powerful, nuanced interpretation of events during the later years of Nazi occupation and the early stages of the nation's Civil War. His fictionalized chronicle gives participants, victims, and innocent bystanders equal opportunity to bear witness to such events as the burning of Valtinos's home village, the detention and execution of combatants and civilians in the monastery of Orthokost, and the revenge killings that ensued. As a transforming work of literature, this book redefined established methods of fiction; as a work of revisionist history, it changed the way Greece understands its own past.

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