1 THOMAS W. GALLANT Nicholas Family Endowed Chair Professor Of

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1 THOMAS W. GALLANT Nicholas Family Endowed Chair Professor Of THOMAS W. GALLANT Nicholas Family Endowed Chair Professor of Modern Greek History & Archaeology Co-Director of the Center for Hellenic Studies Department of History, 0104 University of California, San Diego 9500 Gilman Drive La Jolla, CA 92903-0104 (w) 858-534-9597 (h) 619-764-5060 (cell) 619-602-9275 (Greek mobile) 690-7334254 http://www.thomaswgallant.org/ https://www.facebook.com/thomas.w.gallant Center for Hellenic Studies: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1551568541771813/ EMPLOYMENT HISTORY 1. Nicholas Family Endowed Chair of Modern Greek History, University of California San Diego, 7/07 – 2. Hellenic Heritage Foundation Chair of Modern Greek History, York University, Toronto, 7/03—6/07 3. Hellenic Heritage Chair, Visiting Professor, York University, Toronto, 7/02-6/03 4. Professor, University of Florida, 9/00-7/03 5. Associate Professor, University of Florida, 9/91—9/00 6. Assistant Professor, University of Florida, 9/84-9/91 7. Post-doctoral Fellow, ESRC, Corpus Christi College, Cambridge; 7/82-7/84 Fields of expertise: Modern Greek History; Mediterranean and European Social History; Historical Archaeology; History of Crime and Violence; Rural Economy and Agrarian History; Landscape Studies & GIS; Geoarchaeology Co-director, The Kefallenia and Andros Social History and Archaeology Project. An interdisciplinary research project in collaboration with the University of Athens (2011-2018). Co-director, Center for Hellenic Studies, University of California, San Diego (2015-). Former President, Canadian Hellenic Historical Society (2001-2007) Former President and Executive Director, Canadian Institute of Balkan Studies (2002-2007) Former President, Modern Greek Studies Association (2001-2006) EDUCATION Graduate: University of Cambridge, Ph.D., 1982; Diploma in Classical Archaeology, 1978. 1 Undergraduate: Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI. BA Summa cum Laude: Majors: Archaeology and Anthropology, Classics; Minors: German, History, 1977. College Year in Athens, Athens, Greece, 1976. AWARDS/HONOURS/NOTEWORTHY ACTIVITIES The Inaugural Nikelly Memorial Lecturer, University of Illinois, 2013. National Ethnic Press and Media Council of Canada, winner of 2005 national merit award for outstanding contribution to multiculturalism in Canada, September 2005. Parliament of Canada: Parliament passed a concurrent resolution commending and thanking the authors of The 1918 Anti-Greek in Toronto; at a ceremony afterward, presentation copies of the book were given to the Right Honourable Paul Martin, Prime Minister, the Honourable Peter Milliken, Speaker of the House, and the Chief Librarian, Library of Parliament, June 2005. Series Editor, Edinburgh History of the Greeks, 2009-. Host and narrator of “Violent August”, OMNI television documentary. In production, to be broadcast, December 2008. Based on, The 1918 Anti-Greek Riot in Toronto. PUBLICATIONS Sole-authored Books and Monographs (Published, at press or in progress) In Progress 1. Europe’s First Modern War: The 1897 Greco-Ottoman War. (London: Bloomsbury, under contract). 2. Murder on Black Mountain: Love and Death on a Nineteenth Century Greek Island (Princeton: Princeton University Press, under contract). Published 1. Σύγχρονη Ελλάδα. (Athens: Pedio, 2017). 2. Modern Greece: From Independence to the Present (London: Bloomsbury, 2016). 3. Edinburgh History of the Greeks. Vol 9. The Long Nineteenth Century, 1768- 1913 (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2015). 4. H εμπειρία της αποικιακής κυριαρχίας. Πολιτισμός, ταυτότητα και εξουσία στα Επτάνησα, 1817-1864 (Athens: Alexandria, 2014). 5. Experiencing Dominion: Culture, Identity, and Power in the British Mediterranean. (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 2002). Winner of the “2003 Best Book Prize” from the Modern Greek Studies Association as the most outstanding book in MGS published between 1999 and 2003. 6. Modern Greece. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2001). 7. Risk and Survival in Ancient Greece: Reconstructing the Rural Domestic Economy. (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1991). 8. A Fisherman's Tale: An Analysis of the Potential Productivity of Fishing in the Ancient Mediterranean (Gent: Miscellanea Graeca, University of Gent Press, 1985). 2 9. An Examination of Two Island Polities in Antiquity: The Lefkas-Pronnoi Surveys (Cambridge: University Library, Ph.D. Dissertation, 1982), 2 Vols. Co-authored 1. (with George Treheles and Michael Vitopoulos with Spiros Petropoulos) Violent August: The 1918 Anti-Greek Riot in Toronto/Οι Αγριες Μέρος του Αυγούστο (Toronto: Dimitra and the Canadian Hellenic Historical Society, 2012), 2nd expanded edition. With Greek translation by Gallant, Vitopoulos and Spiros Petropoulos. DVD of Documentary film “Violent August”, Burgeoning Communications, OMNI TV, 2010. 2. (with George Treheles and Michael Vitopoulos) The 1918 Anti-Greek Riot in Toronto (Toronto: Dimitra and the Canadian Hellenic Historical Society, 2005). Edited Volumes, co-editor 1. The Edinburgh History of the Greeks, 500-2015: A Documentary and Primary Source Reader (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, in progress). Articles 1. “'Sometime they do come back': Vampire Burials in Europe and the Mediterranean,” International Journal of Historical Archaeology, in progress. 2. “All Quiet on the Waterfront: Eastern Mediterranean Cities as Sites of Working-class Cosmopolitanism,” Mediterranean Historical Review, under review, 32 pp. 3. “Social History in Greece: A Roundtable,” Social History, 42:4 (2017 forthcoming). 4. “Social History and Historical Archaeology in Greece: the Kefalonia and Andros Project, 2010-2014,” in Redefining Classical Archaeology: Studies in Honor of Anthony Snodgrass edited by Lisa Nevett and James Whitley (Cambridge: McDonald Institute of Archaeology, 2017 forthcoming), 242-67. 5. “Revolution and the Political Economy of Violence,” Historein, 13 (2016), 1-29. 6. “Writing Mediterranean Diasporas after the Transnational Turn,” in Mediterranean Diasporas: Politics and Ideas in the Long 19th Century edited by Maurizio Isabella and Konstantina Zanou (London: Bloomsbury, 2015), 203-208. 7. “Long Time Coming, Long Time Gone: The Past, Present and Future of Social History,” Historien, 11 (2013), 24-49. 8. “Το προσωπικό και το πολιτικό. Αναζητώντας τα συμραζόμενα της βίας στην Ελλάδα του 19ου αιώνα,” in Αναθεωρήσεις του πολιτικού: Ανθρωπολογική και ιστορική έρευνα στην ελληνική κοινωνία edited by Ευθύμιος Παπαταξιάρχης (Athens: Alexandria, 2013), 12-36. 9. “Women. Crime and the Courts in Nineteenth Century Greece,” Historien 11 (2011), 140-160. 10. “Got A Revolution? Student Activism and the Anti-Vietnam War Movement: An Historical Assessment,” Historein, 10 (2010) 18-39. 11. “When Men of Honour Met Men of Law: Ritualized Violence, the Unwritten law and Modern Criminal Justice,” in Crime, Violence and the Modern European State, 1780- 3 2000 edited by Shani d’Cruz, Julia Rowbotham and Efi Avdela(London: Edwin Mellen, 2010) 65-90. 12. “Tales from the Dark Side: Transnational Migration, the Underworld and the ‘Other’ Greeks of the Diaspora,” in Diaspora and Migration: Otherness, Identity and Movement In and Out of Greece edited by Dimitris Tziovas (London: Ashgate, 2009), 17-31. 13. “History, Europe (Early Modern to WWI),” in Routledge International Encyclopedia of Men and Masculinities (RIEMM) edited by Michael Flood, Judith Kegan Gardiner, Bob Pease, and Keith Pringle (London: Routledge, 2007), 418-428. 14. “Europe and the Mediterranean: A Reassessment,” in Europe and Asia: Towards a New Cosmopolitanism edited by Gerard Delanty (London: Routledge, 2006), 50-78. 15. “The Status of Modern Greek and Hellenic Studies in Canada and the York Experience,” Journal of Modern Greek Studies, 25:1 (2006), 141-151. 16. “Hard, Soft and Naked: Power and the Discourse of Law in the British Empire,” Historien, 5 (2006), 17-42. 17. “Athens: 1789-1914,” in Encyclopedia of Europe: 1789-1914, edited by John Merriman and Jay Winter (New York: Charles Schribners’ Sons, 2005), pp. 135-138. 18. “Crime, Violence, and Reform of the Criminal Justice System during the Era of Trikoupis,” in Ο Χαρίλαος Τρικούπις και η εποχή του: Πολιτικές, επιδιώξεις και κοινωνίκες συνθήκες, edited by Καίτη Αρώνη-Τσίχλη και Λύντια Τρίχα. Athens: Papazisi, 2000, 401-411. 19. “Honor, Masculinity, and Ritual Knife-fighting in Nineteenth Century Greece,” American Historical Review, 105, 2 (April, 2000), 359-382. 20. “Commentary,” Journal of Modern Greek Studies, 17,1 (1999), 203-205. 21. “Brigandage, Piracy, Capitalism and State-formation: Transnational Crime in an Historical World-systems Perspective,” in States and Illegal Networks, edited by Joshua Heyman and Alan Smart. London: Berg Press, 1999, 23-61. 22. “Murder in a Mediterranean City: Homicide Trends in Athens, 1850-1936,” Journal of the Hellenic Diaspora 23.2 (1997), 7-28. 23. “Greek Exceptionalism and Contemporary Historiography: New Pitfall and Old Debates,” Journal of Modern Greek Studies, 16:1 (1998), 17-27. 24. “The Historical Setting,” in Greece: An Area Studies Handbook (Washington D.C.: Library of Congress, 1995), 1-82. 25. “Collective Action and Atomistic Actors: Labor Unions, Strikes and Crime in Greece in the Post-war Era,” in Greece in the 21st Century , edited by Theofanis Stavrou and Dimitri Constas (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995), 243-321. 26. “Turning the Horns: Cultural Metaphors, Material Conditions, and the Peasant Language of Resistance in Ionian Islands (Greece) during the Nineteenth-century,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 36: 4
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