Constructing Identity and Heritage at the Crossroads: Albanian Families’ Cross-Border Connections and Homemaking Projects in Athens

Authors

  • Eleni Vomvyla Institute of Archaeology University College London

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5334/pp.53

Keywords:

Albanian families, Athens, Ethnography, Heritage, Identity, Transnationalism, Homemaking

Abstract

Drawing from the author’s ethnographic/participatory work with Albanian families in Athens, this paper tells the story of two families constructing identity and heritage in Greece and Albania. The processes involved in the families’ literal and metaphorical connections with the ‘old country’, manifested in cross-border links, everyday routines and material cultures, are integral to their homebuilding projects in their new locale. Given families’ multiple-place-allegiance and disenfranchised status in a Greek context, theories on transnationalism and history and heritage from below are utilised in order to consider identity and heritage formation in the course of everyday routines. It is argued that the experience of building lives in more than two worlds results in the emergence of plurilocal identities, challenging spatially bounded notions of heritage.

Author Biography

Eleni Vomvyla, Institute of Archaeology University College London

PhD candidate

Institute of Archaeology

University College London

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Published

2013-01-31

Issue

Section

Research Papers