Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jn8rn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-28T06:54:36.046Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Minoan archaeology in the Athens 2004 Olympic Games

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 January 2017

Anna Simandiraki*
Affiliation:
University of Bath, UK

Abstract

The Athens 2004 Olympic Games presented an opportunity for Greece to celebrate its ancient traditions and modern organizational skills. The organizers used archaeology as theory, iconography, idealism and so on. They particularly focused on Classical antiquity, when the Games were at their height before their modern revival. This article, however, will examine the use of Minoan archaeology. I argue that, although there is no archaeological evidence to connect Minoan archaeology to the original Olympic Games, the modern Greek national narrative adapted it to the current national image of the Olympic Games. I analyse this phenomenon by deconstructing some of its processes, taking Crete as a case study. I also highlight broader issues, concerning the instrumentality of the public domain in the shaping of cultural heritage.

Les Jeux Olympiques d'Athènes de 2004 furent pour la Grèce une occasion de célébrer ses traditions anciennes et ses talents d'organisation modernes. Les organisateurs se sont basés sur l'archéologie comme thérie, iconographie, idéalisme etc. Ils se sont surtout concentrés sur l'antiquité classique, époque où les Jeux connaissaient leur apogée avant leur renaissance moderne. Cet article étudie cependant spécifiquement l'utilisation de l'archéologie minoenne. Je prétends que, même sans qu'il n'y ait de preuve archéologique d'un rapport entre archéologie minoenne et Jeux Olympiques originaux, la narration grecque moderne l'a adaptée à l'image nationale commune des Jeux. J'analyse ce phénomène en décomposant quelques-uns de ses processus et en prenant Crète comme étude de cas. En même temps, je mets en évidence des sujets plus globaux se rapportant au rôle du domaine public dans l'énonciation du patrimoine culturel.

Zusammenfassung

Zusammenfassung

Die Olympischen Spiele 2004 in Athen gaben Griechenland die Möglichkeit, seine alten Traditionen und modernen Organisationsfähigkeiten zu feiern. Die Organisatoren nutzten Archäologie als Theorie, in der Ikonographie, beim Idealismus usw. Sie rückten dabei das klassische Altertum, während dessen sich die Spiele vor ihrer modernen Wiederbelebung auf dem Höhepunkt befanden, in den Mittelpunkt. Der vorliegende Beitrag untersucht dagegen die Nutzung der Minoischen Archäologie. Es wird erörtert, dass - auch wenn keine archäologischen Beweise vorliegen, um Minoische Archäologie mit den ursprünglichen Olympischen Spielen zu verbinden - die moderne griechische Tradition diese für das derzeitige Bild der Olympischen Spiele adaptierte. Dieses Phänomen wird diskutiert, indem anhand von Kreta als Fallstudie einige seiner Prozesse dekonstruiert werden. Es werden weiterführende Gesichtspunkte beleuchtet, die die Instrumentalisierung der Öffentlichkeit in der Formung des kulturellen Erbes betreffen.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2005 Sage Publications 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Academic and literature Google Scholar
Baer, A., 2001. Consuming history and memory through mass media products. European Journal of Cultural Studies 4 (4):491501.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bintliff, J.L., 1984. Structuralism and myth in Minoan studies. Antiquity 58:3338.Google Scholar
Brown, K. and Theodossopoulos, D., 2004. Others’ Others: talking about stereotypes and constructions of Otherness in Southeast Europe. History and Anthropology 15 (1), 314.Google Scholar
Cadogan, G., 2004. ‘The Minoan distance': the impact of Knossos upon the twentieth century. In Cadogan, G., Hatzaki, E. and Vasilakis, A. (eds), Knossos: Palace, City, State:537545. London: British School at Athens (Studies 12).Google Scholar
Copeland, T., 2002. Citizenship education and heritage. Internet Archaeology 12. URL (accessed 29 November 2002): http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue12/copeland_index.html Google Scholar
Copeland, T., 2004. Presenting archaeology to the public: constructing insights on-site. In Merriman, N. (ed.), Public Archaeology:132144. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Coulby, D., 2005. Globalization and the narrative of civilization: Classical Greece as curricular construct. In Coulby, D. and Zambeta, E. (eds), World Yearbook of Education 2005: Globalization and Nationalism in Education:193212. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Dewsbury, J.D., 2002. Embodying time, imagined and sensed. Time and Society 11 (1):147154.Google Scholar
Dimakos, I.C. and Tasiopoulou, K., 2003. Attitudes towards migrants: what do Greek students think about their immigrant classmates? Intercultural Education 14 (3):307316.Google Scholar
Farnoux, A., 2003. 86(March):36–41. Google Scholar
Geissler, K., 2002. A culture of temporal diversity. Time and Society 11:131140.Google Scholar
Hamilakis, Y., 1996. Through the looking glass: nationalism, archaeology and the politics of identity. Antiquity 70:975978.Google Scholar
Hamilakis, Y., 1999. La trahison des archéologues? Archaeological practice as intellectual activity in postmodernity. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 12 (1):6079.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hamilakis, Y., 2000. Cyberspace/cyberpast/cybernation: constructing Hellenism in hyperreality. European Journal of Archaeology 3 (2):241264.Google Scholar
Hamilakis, Y., 2001. Interrogating archaeological pedagogies. In Rainbird, P. and Hamilakis, Y. (eds), Interrogating Pedagogies, Archaeology in Higher Education, Lampeter Workshop in Archaeology 3:512. Oxford: Archaeopress, BAR International Series 948.Google Scholar
Hamilakis, Y., 2002. The past as oral history: towards an archaeology of the senses. In Hamilakis, Y., Pluciennik, M. and Tarlow, S. (eds), Thinking Through the Body: Archaeologies of Corporeality:121136. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum.Google Scholar
Hamilakis, Y., 2003. ‘Learn history!’ Antiquity, national narrative, and history in Greek educational textbooks. In Brown, K.S. and Hamilakis, Y. (eds), The Usable Past: Greek Metahistories:3766. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.Google Scholar
Hamilakis, Y. and Yalouri, E., 1996. Antiquities as symbolic capital in modern Greek society. Antiquity 70:117129.Google Scholar
Hamilakis, Y. and Yalouri, E., 1999. Sacralising the past: cults of archaeology in modern Greece. Archaeological Dialogues 6 (2):115135.Google Scholar
Herzfeld, M., 1991. A Place in History, Social and Monumental Time in a Cretan Town. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Hodder, I., 2003. Sustainable time travel: toward a global politics of the past. In Kane, S. (ed.), The Politics of Archaeology and Identity in a Global Context:139147. Boston, MA: Archaeological Institute of America.Google Scholar
Johnstone, C., 1998. ‘Your Granny had one of those!’ How visitors use museum collections. In Arnold, J., Davies, K. and Ditchfield, S. (eds), History and Heritage, Consuming the Past in Contemporary Culture:6777. Shaftesbury: Donhead.Google Scholar
Kane, S., 2003. The politics of archaeology and identity in a global context. In Kane, S. (ed.), The Politics of Archaeology and Identity in a Global Context:19. Boston, MA: Archaeological Institute of America.Google Scholar
Kardulias, P.N., 1994. Archaeology in modern Greece: bureaucracy, politics and science. In Kardulias, P.N. (ed.), Beyond the Site: Regional Studies in the Aegean Area:373385. Lanham, MD: University Press of America.Google Scholar
K., 2004. Doctoral Dissertation, Department of History and Archaeology, Aristoteleian University of Thessalonike.Google Scholar
Kohl, P.L. and Fawcett, C., 1995. Archaeology in the service of the state: theoretical considerations. In Kohl, P.L. and Fawcett, C. (eds), Nationalism, Politics and the Practice of Archaeology:318. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lowenthal, D., 1985. The Past is a Foreign Country. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Merriman, N., 2004. Introduction: diversity and dissonance in public archaeology. In Merriman, N. (ed.), Public Archaeology:117. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
McCrone, D., 1998. The Sociology of Nationalism: Tomorrow's Ancestors. London: Routledge (International Library of Sociology).Google Scholar
Mouliou, M. 1996. Ancient Greece, its Classical heritage and the modern Greeks: aspects of nationalism in museum exhibitions. In Atkinson, J.A., Banks, I., and O'Sullivan, J. (eds), Nationalism and Archaeology:174199. Glasgow: Cruithne Press.Google Scholar
Phillips, R., 1998. Contesting the past, constructing the future: history, identity and politics in schools. In Arnold, J., Davies, K. and Ditchfield, S. (eds), History and Heritage: Consuming the Past in Contemporary Culture:223235. Shaftesbury: Donhead.Google Scholar
Renfrew, C. and Bahn, P., 1996. Archaeology, Theories, Methods and Practice (2nd edn). London: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Roche, M., 2003. Mega-events, time and modernity: on time structures in global society. Time and Society 12 (1):99126.Google Scholar
Silberman, N.A., 1995. Promised lands and chosen peoples: the politics and poetics of archaeological narrative. In Kohl, P.L. and Fawcett, C. (eds), Nationalism, Politics and the Practice of Archaeology:249262. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Simandiraki, A., 2004. Minopaidies: the Minoan civilisation in Greek primary education. World Archaeology 36 (2):177188.Google Scholar
Simandiraki, A. in press. The ‘Minoan’ experience of schoolchildren in Crete. In Hamilakis, Y. and Momigliano, N. (eds), Uses and Appropriations of the ‘Minoan’ Past. Creta Antica, special volume.Google Scholar
Simandiraki, A. forthcoming. ‘The Minoans founded the Olympics’ – A survey of public perception.Google Scholar
Smardz Frost, K.E., 2004. Archaeology and public education in North America: view from the beginning of the millennium. In Merriman, N. (ed.), Public Archaeology:5984. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Stone, P.G., 1994. Introduction: a framework for discussion. In Stone, P.G. and Molyneaux, B.L. (eds), The Presented Past: Heritage, Museums and Education:1528. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Tastsoglou, E. and Hadjicostandi, J., 2003. Never outside the Labour Market, but always outsiders: female migrant workers in Greece. The Greek Review of Social Research 110:189220.Google Scholar
Treuil, R., 2003. 86: 31–35.Google Scholar
Trigger, B.G., 2003. Alternative archaeologies: nationalist, colonialist, imperialist. In Trigger, B.G., Artifacts and Ideas, Essays in Archaeology:6786. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Transaction Publishers.Google Scholar
Ucko, P., 1986. Political uses of archaeology. In Dobinson, C. and Gilchrist, R. (eds), Archaeology, Politics and the Public:4550. York: York University Archaeological Publications No.5.Google Scholar
Yalouri, E., 2001. The Acropolis: Global Fame, Local Claim. Oxford: Berg.Google Scholar
Zambeta, E., 2005. Globalized history in a nationalist context: the curricular construction of Greece. In Coulby, D. and Zambeta, E. (eds), World Yearbook of Education 2005: Globalization and Nationalism in Education:213236. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
1986. vol. 2, :296299.Google Scholar
2004.
Newspaper, 2004a. 14–15 August 2004:10.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Newspaper, 2004b. 2004, 15 August 2004:3.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Newspaper, 2004c. 14 August 2004:26.Google Scholar
Newspaper, 2004d. 15 August 2004:11.Google Scholar
Newspaper, 2004e. 18 June 2004:23.Google Scholar
Newspaper, 2004f. 24 June 2004:7.Google Scholar
Newspaper, 2004g. 18 August 2004:9.Google Scholar
Newspaper, 2004h. 25 June 2004:4Google Scholar
Newspaper, 2004i. 14–15 August 2004:4–5.Google Scholar
Newspaper, 2004j. [sic] 11 August 2004:8.Google Scholar
Newspaper, 2005a. 4 August 2005:12.Google Scholar
Newspaper, 2005b. 4 August 2005:8.Google Scholar
Athens, 2004a. Olympic Games Opening Ceremony. NET 13 August 2004, TV broadcast.Google Scholar
Athens, 2004b. Olympic Games – Olympic cities. URL (accessed 13 February 2005): http://www.athens2004.com/en/OlympicCities Google Scholar
Athens, 2004c. Cultural Olympiad. URL (accessed 13 February 2005): http://www.cultural-olympiad.gr/st/html_files/index_0.html Google Scholar
Athens News Agency, 2004. 13 August 2004:23.Google Scholar
M., 2004. 18 August 2004:14.Google Scholar
2004. (Tourist Press) 15, August 2004:4.Google Scholar
2004. 25 June 2004:14–15.Google Scholar
2004. … 3.500 74 January–February 2004:14–18.Google Scholar
M., 2004. 24 September 2004:10.Google Scholar
2004. URL (accessed 19 August 2004): http://www.heraklion-city.gr/ Google Scholar
2004. (inset of ) 29 August 2004:6.Google Scholar
2003. URL (accessed 26 December 2003): http://www.efsimon.gr (concerning Minoan themed Olympic pins).Google Scholar
N., 2004. 15 August 2004: 46–47.Google Scholar
A., 2004a. 4 October 2004:26.Google Scholar
A., 2004b. 1 July 2004.Google Scholar
N., 2004. 15 August 2004:45.Google Scholar
K. & A. 2004. To 24 June 2004:10.Google Scholar
K. & A. 2006. To 28 January 2006:9.Google Scholar
2004. 23 June 2004:1, 4.Google Scholar
E., 2004. 2004. BHMAGAZINO (inset of ) 200 15 August 2004:58–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O.E.O.A. A$THHNA, 2004, 2004. (E.$SM.O.$PI.) (E.$SM.O.$PI.$PI. ‘HPAKΛEIOY'). URL (accessed 19 August 2004): http://www.heraklion-city.gr/ Google Scholar
A., 2004. 15 August 2004:A13.Google Scholar
B., 2004. TV online version 24 June 2004. URL (accessed 18 August 2004): http://www.creterv.gr/ Google Scholar
N., 2004. 14 August 2004:34–35.Google Scholar
K., 2004. business. To 27 August 2004:2.Google Scholar
2004. 15 August 2004:33.Google Scholar
B., 2004. 14–15 August 2004:15.Google Scholar
A., 2004. 15 August 2004:46.Google Scholar
N.M., 2006. 2004. 2006. 31 January 2006.Google Scholar
M., 2004. To To 15 August 2004:A10.Google Scholar
Toubis, S.A., 2004. Herakleion Olympic city greeting card depicting Herakleion as an Olympic city, no.020075.Google Scholar
M., 2004. 2004, Herakleion: Iraklion Offset, leaflet.Google Scholar
2004. 24 (daily broadcast), NET 16 August 2004, 00.15-02.00, interview with D. Papaioannou.Google Scholar
A., 2004. (inset of ) 14–15 August 2004:1.Google Scholar
2004. brochure.Google Scholar
2004. 29 August 2004:24.Google Scholar
2004. pins. 29 August 2004:45.Google Scholar
2004 (DVD). Olympic Champions of Crete, DVD.Google Scholar
B., 2004. To 15 August 2004:A24.Google Scholar
2004. To 15 August 2004:A12.Google Scholar