Awarded the H. Earle Johnson Book Publication Subvention by the Society for American Music
— Society for American Music (SAM) H. Earle Johnson Book Publication Subvention
“League’s polytemporal and multi-sited ethnography listens to musics within the Anatolian Greek diaspora, offering a far-reaching understanding of musical intercommunality. By centering relationship and personhood, League lets musicians Dean Lampros, Sophia Bilides, and members of the remarkable Kereakoglow and Kyriakoglu family become our teachers. This book is a timely meditation on the sounds, material traces, and insights that flow from a century of negotiation with a difficult and traumatic past, wherein future-looking nostalgias cultivate new modes of empathizing across difference.”
—Denise Gill, Associate Professor of Ethnomusicology, Stanford University
— Denise Gill
“This groundbreaking book demonstrates the value of music and dance as a social practice and metaphor for a pluralistic ethos of living. Panayotis League’s transnational ethnography and archival research combine a scholar’s and musician’s skills and sensibilities to explore the music of the Anatolian Greeks and their diaspora in New England. Transregional, transcultural, and intergenerational in scope, spanning the twentieth century to the present, Echoes of the Great Catastrophe opens new imaginative venues about the meaning of living with and across difference today.”
—Yiorgos Anagnostou, Modern Greek Program, Ohio State University
— Yiorgos Anagnostou
“League’s polytemporal and multi-sited ethnography listens to musics within the Anatolian Greek diaspora, offering a far-reaching understanding of musical intercommunality. By centering relationship and personhood, League lets musicians Dean Lampros, Sophia Bilides, and members of the remarkable Kereakoglow and Kyriakoglu family become our teachers. This book is a timely meditation on the sounds, material traces, and insights that flow from a century of negotiation with a difficult and traumatic past, wherein future-looking nostalgias cultivate new modes of empathizing across difference.”
—Denise Gill, Associate Professor of Ethnomusicology, Stanford University
— Denise Gill
"Rarely does there emerge an ethnographer whose description and analysis strike so close to the beating heart of the topic that readers palpably experience its beauty and pain. Panayotis League is such a writer. In Echoes of the Great Catastrophe: Re-sounding Anatolian Greekness in Diaspora, League explores the ways that musical traditions from the island of Lesvos have reflected and mediated shifting identities both in Lesvos and in its diaspora. In the process, he touches upon the essence of diaspora—to be exiled from what is perceived as home and thus impelled to constantly re-create it."
—Journal of American Folklore
— Tina Bucuvalas, Journal of American Folklore
"League has written a book that all lovers of Anatolian Greek music should be grateful for. He is a an excellent storyteller, and combines that skill with a thorough knowledge of the music he writes about and the people who perform it. He demonstrates the power of music to recreate an otherwise inaccessible past, enabling Anatolian Greeks to imaginatively engage with their ancestors and the lost intercommunal world of late Ottoman society."
—Journal of Modern Greek Studies,
— Gail Holst-Warhaft, Journal of Modern Greek Studies
Awarded Society for American Music (SAM) H. Earle Johnson Book Publication Subvention
— SAH H. Earle Johnson Book Publication Subvention
“This groundbreaking book demonstrates the value of music and dance as a social practice and metaphor for a pluralistic ethos of living. Panayotis League’s transnational ethnography and archival research combine a scholar’s and musician’s skills and sensibilities to explore the music of the Anatolian Greeks and their diaspora in New England. Transregional, transcultural, and intergenerational in scope, spanning the twentieth century to the present, Echoes of the Great Catastrophe opens new imaginative venues about the meaning of living with and across difference today.”
—Yiorgos Anagnostou, Modern Greek Program, Ohio State University
— Yiorgos Anagnostou