Tomeki

Digenis Akritas

Digenis Akritas: l'épopée anatolienne sous les Signes de la Marginalité et de l'Altérité

La sous-koinè anatolienne

By Paul Mirabile

0 (0 Ratings)
0 Want to read0 Currently reading0 Have read

Publish Date

2008

Publisher

Voies Itinerantes

Language

-

Pages

407

Description:

Digenis Akritas roams the deserts of Cappadochia far from Constantinople, the seat of mediaeval Byzantine tyrannical power, and from modern Greek nationalism which has appropriated the errant hero for its ideological warfare against Republican Turkey. Digenis, as his name suggests, erred along the frontier of two nations: Byzantine Greek and Arab, and between two beings: his Moslem father's and his Christian mother's. Only his marginal existence from Constantinople, and his practice of alterity between Byzantine and Arab along the frontier of Southern Cappadochia, allowed him to savour the pleasures of independance, and chant this errant knighthood independance in epic form. His eight chants are compared with the Armenian epic tale, David of Sassoun, and with the Turkic epic tale, Dede Korkut, composing thus the sous-koinè of Anatolia.