George Seferis and Ioanna Seferiadi Tsatsou through their Youthful Correspondence
Presented By
The American School of Classical Studies at Athens, Archives
The Center for Byzantine, Modern Greek & Cypriot Studies, University of Granada
The Society of Friends of Konstantinos and Ioanna Tsatsos
Speaker(s)
Vasiliki Kontogianni, Democritus University of Thrace
Christina Ntounia, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
Maila García Amorós, University of Granada
Location
ASCSA, Cotsen Hall, 9 Anapiron Polemou, 106 76 AthensOn February 6, 2025, the Archives of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, the Center for Byzantine, Modern Greek & Cypriot Studies of the University of Granada, and the Society of Friends of Constantine and Ioanna Tsatsos invite you to an event concerning the recent publication of the youthful correspondence between poet George Seferis and his sister Ioanna Seferiadis (1919-1924) by Maila García Amorós, Professor of Modern Greek Studies at the University of Granada. The publication is based on the correspondence of the two siblings which forms part of the personal papers of Ioanna Seferiadi Tsatsou and George Seferis at the Archives of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens.
The discussion will be in Greek.
INTRODUCTION
- Bonna Wescoat, Director of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens
- Natalia Vogeikoff-Brogan, Director of Archives, American School of Classical Studies at Athens
WELCOME COMMENTS
- Despina Tsatsou-Mylona, daughter of Constantine Tsatsos and Ioanna Seferiadi Tsatsou
- Moschos Morfakidis-Filactos, Professor and Director of the Center for Byzantine, Modern Greek & Cypriot Studies of the University of Granada
- Christos Nikou, President of the Society of Friends of Constantine and Ioanna Tsatsos
SPEAKERS
- Vasiliki Kontogianni, Professor Emeritus of Modern Greek Literature at the Democritus University of Thrace
- Christina Ntounia, Professor Emeritus of Modern Greek Literature at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
- Maila García Amorós, Professor of Modern Greek Studies at the University of Granada