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  1. When did Britain join the Occident? On the origins of the idea of ‘the West’ in English.Georgios Varouxakis - 2020 - History of European Ideas 46 (5):563-581.
    ABSTRACT This article takes issue with the current orthodoxy that the idea of ‘the West' as a supranational self-description based on civilizational commonality first emerged in English in the 1890s and 1900s in the context of the needs of British high imperialism. It shows, first, that there were, already in the eighteenth century, incipient attempts towards a term denoting a distinctive West-European cultural unity. It argues, further, that such uses were rather casual and interchangeable with overwhelmingly more references to ‘Europe' (...)
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  • Re-staging the ‘Eastern Question’: Arthur J. Evans and the search for the origins of European civilization in the Balkans.Georgios Giannakopoulos - 2020 - History of European Ideas 46 (5):601-613.
    ABSTRACT The article revisits the history of the ‘Eastern Question’ and its impact in late Victorian England through the lens of the British scholar Arthur J. Evans. Evans is best known for his archaeological discoveries in the island of Crete in the beginning of the twentieth century. His journalistic and archaeological ventures in the Balkans in the 1870s and 1880s have received scant attention. The article recovers Evans’ activities which straddled humanitarianism, political activism, archaeology, anthropology/ethnography and journalism. Although Evans was (...)
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