Of potential interest to scholars, artists, activists, authors, poets, educators, public intellectuals, filmmakers, journalists working on issues
of gender and Greek women.
A major contour of
Ergon’s politics involves foregrounding questions of diasporic gender and women. The interest lies in exploring how women have been acting on patriarchal structures and economic systems of exploitation. How the next generation negotiates intergenerational
trauma, tradition, norms, male authority. How it articulates and frames women’s voices. The strategies and tactics of women’s agency.
Questions on the ethics and politics of representation are central to our inquiry and, also, the material conditions shaping women’s life trajectories.
We utilize a variety of writing genres: interview, essay, article, blog, poetry, book review. We analyze fiction, public fora, essays, experiences, cultural memories, the archive.
This cultural work primarily connects with Greek America and lately Greek Australia and is now venturing into representations cast in terms of globality. Involving conversations across national boundaries this orientation inevitably opens a space where modern
Greek and transnational diasporic studies intersect. It is in this space of cross-fertilization that we also wish to cultivate inviting colleagues from various disciplines to contribute to our mission.
Ergon is the product of labor that perhaps does not advance one’s career the way publishing in other venues would. This is what attaches to our work added value, the ethos of practicing scholarship in various iterations because first and foremost what matters
is the ethics and politics we pursue.
I thank all our contributors for making this project possible.
Below is a list of our publications on gender and women (2021-2026). [my apologies of any inadvertent omissions]
‘It is Chic to be Greek’ in the Greek/American Classroom: Ethnic Revival, Representation, Gender.” Yiorgos Anagnostou, 2021.
“Writing
Greek America: Perspectives on Gender and Sexuality.” Artemis, Leontis, 2021.
“Fathers
and Daughters: Joanna Eleftheríou’s This Way Back.” Review. George Kouvaros, 2022.
“Aubrey
Dawne Edwards, Artist, Educator, Storyteller, Advocate for Social Justice: An Interview.” Artemis Leontis, 2023.
“Her
Heritage Made Sense”—Diasporic Success!
Women
Transmitting and Queering Foodways in Annie Liontas’s Let Me Explain You.” Yiorgos Anagnostou, 2023.
“The
Politics of Life and Death: Working-Class Greek Immigrant Women and the Castle Gate Mine Disaster––A Tribute.” Yiorgos Anagnostou, 2024.
The Mother Must Die. Review of Koraly Dimitriadis’ book. Dean Kalymniou, 2024.
Still navigating through uncharted waters in radio silence: Is anyone there? Leah Fygetakis, 2025.
The Greek Table. Artemis Leontis, 2026.
Performing Belonging: Reimagining Greek America through Embodied Artistic Practice. Yona Stamatis, 2026.
A Greek Revolution in America, Eleftheria Lialios, 2026.
Across a Polarized Divide. Elaine Angelopoulos, 2026
Greek
Women Speak: An Appreciation. Dean Kalymniou, 2026.
Articulating
Women’s Voices Across Borders: Reflections on Balance the Scales: Women, Migration and Leadership 1835–2026. Dean Kalymniou, 2026.