TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an overview of the history of Hellenism in Greece, including early history, the establishment of the Greek state, the war and its aftermath, and the renewal of Greekness.
Abstract: ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS PREFACE CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION I.A. GLOBAL AND LOCAL HELLENISMS I.B. TRACING THE ACROPOLIS I.C. OUTLINE OF THE FOLLOWING CHAPTERS CHAPTER II. AN HISTORICAL OUTLINE II.A. EARLY HISTORY II.B. THE NATIONAL ERA II.B.1. The Establishment of the Greek State II.B.2. The Revival of the Two-Headed Eagle and the Reconciliation of the Classical and the Byzantine Past II.B.3. Preparing for the 20th Century II.B.4. The 1930s Generation and the Regeneration of 'Greekness' II.B.5. The War and its Aftermath II.B.6. Towards a Democratic Pluralism CHAPTER III. GREECE CONDENSED: MATERIALISING NATIONAL IDENTITY III.A. THE ACROPOLIS AS HISTORY III.B. THE ACROPOLIS AS TERRITORY III.C. THE ACROPOLIS AS GREEK FLAG III.D. THE ACROPOLIS AS BODY III.E. CONCLUSIONS CHAPTER IV. CONTESTING GREEK IDENTITY: BETWEEN THE LOCAL AND THE GLOBAL IV.A. INTRODUCTION IV.B. BUILDING AN IMAGE - THE 'MISSION' OF ANTIQUITIES ABROAD IV.C. REQUEST FOR REPATRIATION/RESTITUTION OF HELLENISM IV.D. REVIVAL - RESTORATION - REGENERATION IV.E. NAMES, POWER AND THE CLAIMS OF IDENTITY IV.F. WRITING HISTORY IV.G. CONCLUSIONS CHAPTER V. CONSUMING INALIENABLE WEALTH V.A. COCA-COLA VERSUS THE ACROPOLIS: THE CLASH OF THE TITANS V.B. THE OLYMPICS IN ATLANTA - HOW THE GOLDEN OLYMPAID TURNED INTO PLASTIC V.C. FROM THE SALOON TO THE HERODEION: BLUE JEANS AND CLASSICAL HERITAGE V.D. TOURISM IN GREECE: THE 'DOUBLE-DECKER' AND THE FATE OF THE ACROPOLIS V.E. CONCLUSIONS CHAPTER VI. THE AESTHETICS OF SACREDNESS VI.A. INTRODUCTION VI.B. GREEK SYNCRETISM VI.C. THE 'WORSHIP' OF THE ACROPOLIS VI.D. VISUALISING OCA ACROPOLIS VI.E. PURITY AND POLLUTION - FORMALISED BEHAVIOUR VI.F. THE ACROPOLIS' GUARDS VI.G. THE DISCOURSE OF PURITY AND POLLUTION AS A FORM OF RESISTANCE VI.H. WHITE - THE COLOUR OF PURITY VI.I. A CONTEST OVER 'CLEANLINESS' VI.J. THE PURSUIT OF AUTHENTICITY AND THE REUNION OF TELOS AND ORIGIN CHAPTER VII. CONCLUSIONS
Abstract: 1. Introduction 2. Setting the stage 3. Growth and variety 4. The siting of sanctuaries 5. Architecture for the Gods: sacred building 6. Activities and experiences I 7. Activities and experiences II: offerings 8. Sanctuary histories: Olympia 9. Sanctuary histories: Delphi 10. Sanctuary histories: Samos 11. Sanctuary histories: Poseidonia 12. Sanctuary histories: the Acropolis at Athens 13. Greece, Rome and Byzantium 14. The aftermath.
TL;DR: A detailed architectural study of the building's chronology and history is presented in this article, based on records from Nikolaos Balanos' dismantling and re-erection of the temple of Athena Nike on the Athenian Acropolis.
Abstract: Based on records from Nikolaos Balanos' dismantling and reerection of the temple of Athena Nike on the Athenian Acropolis (between 1935 and 1939), this volume presents a detailed architectural study of the building's chronology and history.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an overview of the history and iconography of the Acropolis korai and the Fifth century portrait statues on the top of the pyramid of the Temple of Artemis.
Abstract: Part I. Anathemata: 1. Statues as gifts for the gods 2. Votive statue inscriptions 3. Nothing to do with democracy?: Votive statues and Athenian history 4. Votive statues and Athenian society Part II. Divine Identities: 5. The identities of the Acropolis korai 6. The iconography of the Acropolis korai Part III: 7. Fifth century portrait statues on the Acropolis Conclusion Appendices.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a set of rectified site plans from the late nineteenth century to the date of publication for the Copan valley of the Acropolis of the Inca pyramid.
Abstract: cut through the Acropolis by the Copan River (Becker) is the least-informative contribution to this volume. As an editorial note indicates, no illustrations were supplied by the author. The contribution does not, in any coherent way, describe the work carried out or results obtained in excavations of this area. It subordinates presentation of these results to a superficial discussion of the possible function of various areas of the Acropolis, which seems overly speculative and without grounding in research at the site. The final volume may be the most valuable contribution of this set, providing important data for comparative studies of Maya settlement. A brief but valuable introduction details the conventions of rectified mapping and recapitulates the site typology used (Fash). It includes a table presenting group composition, numbering, and investigations from the late nineteenth century to the date of publication. Since the numbering systems used have changed, this concordance is the only easy way to correlate existing reports on excavations in the Copan Valley. The maps (Long) include 24 individual 1-km blocks at 1:2,000 incorporating rectified site plans. Two maps at 1:6,250 covering the entire valley, presented in two sections each, show the relative location of these remains.