Dance at Olymbos, Karpathos
Transcription
Dance at Olymbos, Karpathos
Dance at Olymbos, Karpathos Cultural Change and Political Confrontations 1 PAVLOS KAVOUR \> Hie dances of a people are an integral part ol its culture. In traditional societies the relationship between dance and culture is a symbolic one: dance is at once a vehicle lor the creation o f folk culture and a product or expression of it.- In any traditional society dance is a medium of expression shared by all members. To the dancers themselves, the traditional dances of their homeland symbolize the very culture o f their people.' I he central thesis of this article is that dance has two distinct yet interconnected dimensions, a political and a cultural. I shall demonstrate that dance is a means through whkh ihc participants (1) express their political differences according to their economic and social interests, and (2) active!) experience their cultural identity as members ol a traditional community. During the last twenty years there has been a bur geoning of systematic anthropological research on dance. 4 Within this clime, Greek and foreign anthropo logists have focused their attentions on Greek dance, shedding light on its social, political and cultural dimensions. 3 Of these studies, the approach adopted by Cowan is of particular interest here, since it examines dance as a political and cultural phenomenon. ( Owan explores the relationship between dance and politics, treating dance as a social practice with a struc tural, hermeneutical and political-ideological content.'' Mei approach is based on the premise that culture is a form of "hegemony . that is a means of imposing and niizing the ideas of dominant political groups within a particular society. 1 She demonstrates that there is not JUSI one practice associated with dance but as many practices as there are social groups with conflicting interests. However, one fundamental drawback to this approach is that cultural relationships are reduced to socio-political practices with hegemonic or anti-hegemonic significance, thus precluding ι he study of the symbolic rtsiorj ol dance (which, more than any other, is its cultural dimension). In this pape- I shall studs dance as a political and cultural rite. More specifically. I shall examine the evo lution of dance at Olymbos, Karpathos in relation to the major social and cultural changes experienced by the people of this village. On Karpailms, as in other rural areas Of Greece, dance is an integral part of a community ritual known as the g/end/, a word meaning "revelry, feast* li • ί> most important to study dance in relation to thee/end/ because κ is in these arenas that the Olymbians as a community express ritually (heir relationship with the world. I shall present the evolution of the Olymbos dance in three stages, l i r s i 1 shall describe a typical dance ai a contemporary local festival {paaiyiri), ι hen I shall en the question o f the dance tradition, and finally, I shall examine the prcsent-dav phenomenon o\ commercial ization of dance, focusing on its cultural and political dimensions. A. The Festival of Saint John (The Paniyiri of \i-\:umi->t Every year, starting on 28th August, ipaaiyiri is held at Olymbos in honoui oi Si lohn the Baptist. rhispamyiri and the celebration of the D o m i n i o n of the Virgin on August I5lh are the most important community events in Olymbos. Whereas the D o m i n i o n is celebraied in the village, the paniyiri ol Λι ϊ annis is held at two outlying locations, \vlona and Y r o u k o u n d a . ol' symbolic importance tor the Olymbians. Avlona, about an hour's walk north of the village, is the larges• expanse of Hat land hereabouts and was once the "granary of Olymbos. Some two and a hall hours further on is Vroukounda. a coastal site whose history '-''>es back to Classical times. Inside a subterranean cave by the sea. there is a tiny chapel of Saint John the Baptist. T o elderly Olymbians Avlona is a potent symbol of their culture, for this plain was the centre oi agricultural activities al Olymbos up until the mid 1 9 5 0 S J The land was abandoned because of the mass emigration from the village in the 1950s and 1960s."* In contrast to Avlona. which is an incontrovertible symbol of the old unity ol the Olymbians, Vroukounda is a contemporary cultural symbol of two-fold significance: it represents both the break-up ol the Olymbos community and the longing oi Olymbians o\ the diaspora to be part o\ a community again. To the Olymbians the beheading oi Saint I svmboli/es the fragmentation (indeed, the decapitai o\ their community through emigration. This symbolism enables contemporary Olymbians to invoke the saint s spiritual power: they request his intercession that they ι?:•! might regain their lost unity as .1 people and live once more as a community. I he symbolic significance of the pani) iri of Ai-Yuimis is heightened by the fact that emigrants from Olymbos who spend their summer vacations there nearly all go back to their places of domicile at the end of August, just after the least ol Saint lolin. Thus the paniyiri is the last opportunity for all Otymbians those residing perman ently in Olymbos and those living in other parts of Greece and abroad - to least together and to experience actively the unity of the Olvmbian world as one community. Besides being a religious holiday. Uiepaniyiri of Ai-Yannis is the most dramatic representation of the present cultural ciisis in the life of the Otymbians. The Dance at the paniyiri of \i-Yunnis In 1989 I was at the Paniyiri of \i-)annis and look pari in the Festivities. Early in the morning of August 28th a steady stream of people and pack animals loaded with provisions, set out from Olymbos lor Vroukounda, an arduous trek lasting some four hours, during which the walkers are exposed to the searing heat of the sun and nui-t negotiate difficult uphill paths. Though the journcv is usually made on foot, on the occasion of the 1989paniyiri about half the people went to Vroukounda by caique from Dhiafani (the outport of Olymbos), which drew some verycaustic comments from many Olymbians. On arrival at Vroukounda everyone threw themselves into the work of getting the place read) foi the paniyiri. Women spread their blankets on the gently-sloping bank round lhe concrete platform to keep places lor their family, while a group ol men rigged up a large plastic awning above the plat form lo make a covered dance floor, The glendi began short!) alter vespers. After eating, some men pushed two large tables together and placed lour chair- on top of them, in which I he musician- took up their positions: abagpipe player {tsambounicris), a/wa plaver (Jyristis) and two la(gh)outo players {laighyoutie'ridhes). Below them about a dozen men sal round the tables drinking whisky and singing extempore mandi mid lies (litieen syllable rhyming couplets) extolling the spirilual virtues of Saint J o h n . 1 0 Within a short time, five of the singers stood up and, still singing, began to dance round the musicians table. The "dancers'" (for convenience I shall call them A, B, C, I) and E) lined up next to one ler in an open circle, their arms crossed in such a way that C's right palm held E's let"! palm in front ol I) - waist, and C's left palm held Λ - right one in front of B. I lie dance circled slowly anti-clockwise, with the dancers always lacing the musicians. The dance step was a sort of solemn, ritual walk: two paces to the right and one to the left. In less than half an hour girls joined the dance, linking in with the male dancers. Dressed in colourful local costumes and wearing kolaincs (valuable necklaces ol coins), they presented a sinking contrast to the male dancers in their Western clothes." The girls went to the 174 position- discreetly indicated by their chapcrones, who were older female relatives. The chapcrones -at round the musicians' tank with their backs to the players, so a- to lace the dance. Within an hour the platform was crowded with over a hundred people dancing. I idle bv little the musicians stepped up the rhythm from three lo fOUl time and finally to two lime and the dancers (hen kept going at lhis last tempo lor more than seven hours non-stop. By this time the singing had stopped: all attention was concern rated on ihe dance. The dancers joined (he dance according to certain rules evidently heknown to all. The position at the beginning and the end of the chain was always occupied hv a man. When the man at the head ol the chain - t h e kavos in Olvmbian dialect - completed his figures he nodded to the man at the tail to bring his girl dancers to the head. I his dancer then danced each of his female dancers in turn, throwing one or more crumpled banknotes ol at least >(K) drachmas (usually one thousand or five thousand drachma notes) to the musicians each time he changed partner ". The notes were picked up by the participants and put into an empty whisky bottle at the musicians teel. The musicians played Ihe same dance tune incessantly, performing in shifts. Around the dance floor, the onlookers lay on iheir blankets, sometimes watching attentively, then do/ing nit. only to wake again and watch the dance with renewed interest. \Imosl the entire village was there. I he dance lasted all night. At daybreak the last shift of musicians all young men in their twenties stopped playing olvmbian tune-and switched to other Greek folk dances such as kalamatianos, haniotikos, kefalonitikos and syrtds, 10 the delighi ol the young dancers. With these dances, ihegiendi .η Vroukounda came to an end shortly after dawn on the feast day of Saint John. Community and Alienation The festival ol Nam! lohn provides a unique opportunity for Olymbians of the diaspora and permanent residents of Olymbos to teel that they all belong lo one and the same community . I hose attending the festival are brought closer together, both physically and in spun, through the ritual of the paniyiri, but especially through the dance, which eonsiituics the culmination of every celebration at Olymbos. If the success of a community dance is lo be judged by us duration and ihe number ot participants, it is clear that the dance at Olymbos continues 10 appeal to Ihe Olymbians, especially the younger one-, who at the paniyiri of Ai-Yannis joined in with their compatriots from abroad and danced with obvious enthusiasm (Ac/7) ihroughom (he night In private conversation, however, I lotind that several of theg/endi participants resented the way the dance had been conducted at Vroukounda. The) had two main criticisms, one of a general kind and one more particular. The first was that ever since the Olymbos dance had become separated from Iheg/end/ il had ceased lo he a [mystaghogia] and had been reduced to ;i vehicle tor sell projection. The second is thai the absence of representatives ol either of the two political tactions in Olyinbos (ΤΟΠΙ the dance at Vroukounda was contrary to the whok spirit of the puniyih. I he decay of traditional mores and the division ol the population along socio-political lines are fundamental symptoms ol a cultural crisis associated with the di , heOlymbianv This crisis is in striking contrast lo the ritual process ol reviving the Olymbian community through ι he paniyih o\ Ai-Yannis. The processes of unification and differential ion of the community are the most significant manifestations ol the dialectical relationship between contemporary culture and politics at Olyinbos. I shall examine the diaehmnic logic of these processes In a historical approach to the evolution of the Olymbos dance in the twentieth century. However, before I go on to analyse contemporary trends in the dance. I shall try to explain what I mean b\ the dance experience and know ledge of the dance - matters which are more or less familiar to all Olymbians— and how these are acquired. In other words. I shall explore the question of the Olymbos dance tradition. B. Ihe Olymbos Dance Tradition Olymbian boys and girls are taught 10 dance by their mothers at home, and then supplement what they have leaml b> watching their elders dance at public glciidm. How (he \illage elders dance and what the) say about the dance are matters of great importance to the voting. Indeed, one of the favourite topics of conversation among young people is the authenticii> of customs that are still observed today, especially the glendi and dance. Such evaluations and the lines of reasoning behind them are usually based on the established lore and generally accepted usages pi the past, which the elderly Olymhians call customs"" (ethima) and the younger ones call "tradition {paridhom) Since I shall be using the term tradition'" as an analytical concept, I shall first define it. 1 2 Tradition is the process whereby lore and everyday usages that sustain hisiorical continuity are handed down from generation lo generation in a particular society. Viewed as a process, tradition represents not just a body of knowledge (lore) and practices which determine what kinds of behaviour are socially acceptable, but also the ways in which that knowledge and those practices arc acquired and manifested. These ways are not stable but are transformed or even replaced by otheis as one historical period gives way lo the next. However, since what Ihe elderly Olym hians mean when they talk about "customs (as things actively experienced) is quite different from what the young mean by " t r a d i t i o n " (as an ideological construct). even though both words refer to knowledge acquired and usages established in the past, 1 shall refer t o the attitudes and opinions of Ihe older generation as iraditional (in accordance with the definition of tradition given above) and lo those ot the young as nco traditional, putting the word "tradition in inverted commas in the latter ^ase. Before examining traditional discourse on dance and the relationship between this and the various tonus of social practice in Olymbos, I shall explain how the concepts of time and space are traditionally used b\ oiy mbians. Concept*• of Traditional Time Systematic information on the social history of Olymbos in local oral tradition eoes hack lo the lXXOs. There are frequent references to the past in iradiiioual discourse, though no specific dates ate given, simplv the phrases in ihc old davs (pab'd) and "nowadays"" (s/me'ra). The apparent vagueness <>i such references is not. however, an obstacle to communication. Ihc exact meaning implied by words like/>a//a and sinters, or other similar expressions of temporal content, is clearly defined by the discussanis. either in the conversational context or the general framework of social relations to which these terms refer. I his is irue of traditional oral communication in general Ihe traditional Olymbians know the family hislory of all their fellow villagers almost as well as they know their own. C onscquently. any references made to persons or things traditionally associated with certain socio-historical events allude by implication, and most precisely, to these events Besides ihe chronological allusions implicit in the expressions the "old davs"" and "nowadays", there arc two dates which stand oul as landmarks in ihe social history of the Dodecanese since 1880: these are 1912 and 1947. In 1912 the Italians captured the Dodecanese from the Ottoman lurks, and in 1947 Ihe Dodecanese were united with the Greek slate. Olymbians speak o\' the time prior to 1912as "under ihe Turks' , ihe interval 1912 ll>4" as the Italian" period, and the years since ihe Union as the " G r e e k " period. I here is also a third chronological landmark, which is not connected with military events but with socio-economic developments on Karpathos and therefore refers not to one specific year but to a period ol several vears. It is the decade of ihe 1970s, during which a major development drive was launched <>n Kaipathos, prompted b\ a considerable injection ol stale and emigrant capital. State funding was used mainly for infrastructure projects, mainlv in the field ot transport (roads and an international airport), while the returning emigrants put their money in new buildings and tourist enterprises. 1 "' The marked monetarizatton ol the (Carpathian economy had direct repercussions on the traditional culture of Karpaihos and especially of Olymbos. In Olymbian discourse the post1970 years are the age of modernity: Olymbians refer to this period as ihe time when new tangled ideas and forms of activity (fa modcrna) destroyed the old mores. Olymbians speak o\' the period between Union with Greece and modern times as the period ot the great ex pal rial ion" {XCnitcmos), Between 1947 and 1970 the 175 population of Olymbos was halved. Most o f the emigrants went tO Piraeus, Rhodes, Baltimore and New York, while some ended up in Australia and what was then West Germany. 1 4 For traditional Olymbians the chronological watershed between "the old days" and "nowadays"' is the decade of the 1960s, for this is when the liisi social and cultural repercussions of the muss exodus began to make themselves felt. The themes of \enitia and desertion of the village predominate in Olymbians" everyday and ritual conversations !< Concepts of Traditional Space: Parousia and Topikismos The distinction of space into private and public noted in ethnographic studies ot various traditional Creek societies holds also for Olymbos.' 6 However, the ways in which each society, in this case the Olymbian, compre hends and expresses the concepts o f " p r i v a t e " and " p u b Ik arc neither uniform nor historically immutable. In traditional Olymbos, both private and public were conceptualized in a community context, not in a socially isolated, individual one. This distinction also constitutes the specific difference between the traditional and neo-traditional symbolism of Olymbian identity, which subject is discussed in detail below. The Olymhians regard the dance as their most important public event and attribute particular significance to its physical and symbolic space, which thev call the parousia (literally presence, appearance). In traditional discourse the concept of parousia is synecdochically syn onymous with the concept of community; the word is used o f a place or an occasion when the community "appears" or declares its "presence". The concept o f parousia introduces two distinctions into the symbolism of space: that between ritual and everyday space, and that between mixed gender, nude or female space. Τ hepanwsta implies, by definition, a mixed ider, ritual and public space. Since the work place, the home and even the coffee shop do not meet all three o f these conditions, they are not described as places ol parous!, ι For the discourse o\ I he parousia to be articulated, there must exist a relationship of otherness which binds the Olymbian community together through its relationship with the cultural Other, Among the traditionalists o\ Olymbos, the concept of otherness is expressed by the concept o(xenitia, a word meaning foreign parts, expat riation, exile, alienation, and the concept of the cultural Other is rendered by the adjective \enos (foreign, alien, strange). The Olymhians use the word xenos to describe anything that is not part of their everyday experience, and hence anything for which there is no word in the vocabulary o f their community. The concept of xenitte is interlwined with the idea o\' topikismos (literally localism), which constitutes yet another distinct way of conceptualizing space considered from the geo-cultural angle. Neo-lraditionalisi Olymbians speak oi a culturally familiar space - a t once a place 176 (topos) and a way of life {tropos) - as u-hnlopios (local) or dhiko* mas (ours), in contradistinction to any other, which is \cnos (foreign).' Older Olymbians. nn the other hand, use the word ve//(» to describe anything thai does not conform to their traditional culture but always refer to their own domain by its proper name: thev \av an Olymbian woman" {Ofymbitissa) rather than " a local wo m a n ' , and "places in ihe Olymbos area (Qlymbitika nicri) rather than "our part ol the world . One lasl comment on the symbolism of space concerns its differentiation at a cultural and political level. ( riiical analysis of the various usages o f topikismos may help us to understand the relationship between culture and politics in Olymbos. Viewed from a socio-political perspective, topikismos constitutes the ideological nucleus of a strong COnservativism. Traditionalists and neo-lraditionalists alike form their localislic attitudes (which they use to validate their actions within the community) in accordance with various strategies based on a conservative view of Olymbos culture. 1 shall deal with this issue more fully below. One o f the most important symbols of topikismos in traditional Olymbos is \\w glendi. ol which dance is an integral and inextricable part. I shall begin with a description of the Olymbian dance tradition by examining the relationship between the glendi and the dance. Dance and Glendi Song, music and dance are the principal components o f a ritual known in o l y m b o s as the gloadi,1* Both the glendi as a whole, and each of its elements are used in traditional discourse as symbolic representations of the Olymbian community. A n old saying about the dance and song reflects the significance Olymbians attach lo the glendi: " A dancer at twenty, a singer at t h r i t y " . Before W o r l d War II a young m a n s successful participation in the glendi established him as a mature member of the community in the eyes o\ the older people present. Participation in tbcglendi is gender specific. As is clear from the saying quoted above (because ol the gender the words used), those who instigate and co-ordinate the traditional glendi are men aged over thirty. Olymbian men sing mandinudhes, dance and play the traditional instru ments - the tsambouna (bagpipe), rjfra (a three-stringed bowed instrument oi ι he rebec class) and la(gh)outo (a kind of hue). In contrast, Olymbian women play no musical instruments and do not sing in public, except on special family occasions, such as the weddings and funerals of close relatives and. more rarely, ai the christening of their own children. Although singing and playing musical instruments male pursuits, the dance cannot take place without the participation of women: this is a point to which the Olymbians attach especial significance. As already mentioned, the mixed (both sexes), ritual and public space o f the dance constitutes for the glendistos the symbolic "presence" (parotfsia) of their community. For male and female Olymbians, ihc criteria of participation in the dance arc not personal but social. In the pre War period the general mle was thai onl) unmarried first horn sons and daughters took part in the dance, though if a family had other children to marry off, the younger ones participated once the eldest son and daughtei were married. Young mothers did not dance at public dances, nor did small children, with the excej of first-born daughters, who were permitted to join in the dance from the age ol seven or eight. From then until when the) were married, the young giils were chaperoned at the dance by their mothers. I hus, married women did not join in the dance themselves but observed their daughters dancing. The male dancers were older than the generally not less than twenty years of age. Married men danced and sang in public without an) upper age limit, so long as the) were experienced meraklidhes, that is men with a proven talent lot getting [he clcndi participants in w a rapturous stale of mind (Jte7*f). in the village ar the tristrato (crossroads), under the bonenii (west wind) ι saj i!oodb\c ι ο Olymbos wiili the dance and with ihc giendi The dramatic value of this m.mdin.ulivi - i n the original Greek lies in its use of two words, tristrato and bonontis, that define exactly the place and time, the circumstances m which a contemporary farewell giendi is usually held. I he tristrato is an open space in Olymbos where three roads meet: it is here thai mosl ot ihegtendia and dances lake place in the summer. Another allusion to the summer, by implication, is contained in the word bonenttSj the moist westeri) wind thai blows mainl) at thai lime ol year, especially in August (the month when m Olymbians leave the village ai the end of their holidays). To the Olymbians the tristrato and the bonentis, the dance and the giendi are living symbols oi theii community. The Dance as a lJn\c•,•. in ihc Giendi Giendi and Xenitia Ihc unity Ol thcgfeitti* and dance is relleeted in the attitudes of the traditional Olymbian community to xenitia. Before World War II. Olymbians confronted Kenitia, thai symbolic locus of their otherness, with an awe which induced mixed feelings ot terror and respect for anything "foreign", the unknown, rhecommunity treated : xenitia as a symbolic death. " When an Olymbian left tor foreign parts, his relatives would go into mourning foi him as if he had actually died, abstaining from an\ form of entertainment or enjoyment. When anybod) was about to set off on a journey, a giendi would be held in honour of the prospective traveller. < kfymbians of the oldet generation are very fond of these wdl icndi;i because the are lively and high spi affairs {ehoun plousio Ac/; >. \s the) are apt to point out. There's no koft without t e a r s " . : i I he pain tell by the giendi participants at their imminent severance from a beloved person and the breaking up ol their company, in conjunction with the presence ot ; he person about to depart, stimulates and heightens the mcrokiiilhcs' Ac//. Before W 01 Ed W ar II the singers consoled the traveller with then mandinadhes, Stressing that the only antidote to the anguish of expatriation was remembrance οϊ the community. At ,i giendi held in 1935 an Olymbian sang the following to a friend and mcraklis about to leave lor Persia: / are well, my friend \ on 're leaving and III lose you But you may be assured »n friend I shall not forget you On such occasions the alluvions to the idea of the community were made through the concepts ot iheglondi and ι bed.nice, the timeless symbols of Olymbian ideninv. In this traditional spirit a middle-aged meraklis sang in 1989. on the eve ol his departure from Olymbos for Athens, where he now lives: The dance is 10 ihegiendi as the pan is to the whole. Bui what Olymbians mean b) giendi is not simply the sum of its component parts song, music and dance but a rituai process whereby these practices are interwoven. I his is apparent both from ihc I act that traditionalist and neo-traditionalist Olymbians believe thai the proper basis ever) giendi is the conformit) o1 all participants to its rules i *'i a social entertainment to develop into a community feast, that is into a.giendi, the revellers co ordinating the procedure (the meraklidhes) must transform conviviality into elation tAc//i, through Junking, singii 23 music and dancing. Dance, therefore, is not an eiiu in itself but a symbolic means ol uniting the glondi particip anis into a community. "You cant have a dance without a giendi", sa) older Olymbians, expressing the symbolic relationship between Ihe part and Ihe whole, between the dance and the glondi. The dance is the climax ol the giendi process, lor it is during this ritual phase that the participants activel) experience the "presence" iparOUSta) of their community. Since il is pan of a wider process, the Olvmbos dano never performed b) request: it is always instigated b) the companv (pares) ol older singers sitting round the musi cians' table. : 4 I his pare./ is ihe nucleus ol ihc giendi, for which reason :t is known in Olymbian parlance as the middle (i.e. heart) of the dance*', rhe meraklidhes at the heart of the dance initiate {stinoun, literally "set up") ihe dance according to strict conventions, setting the scene for the entry of the young men and girl dancers. Structural!) and functionally, therefore, the dance symbolizes the continuit) of the community through the creative coexistence ol the old and ihe young generation. The Phases of the Olymbos Dance There are three names lor the dance, depending on the rhythm ot the accompanying tune: kuto horos or •>!(• :!thwo> (i.C. slow ), gonatistos (literally from the knees) IT; and pino hom* (lasi). Kato horns is danced in three time. gonatistos in a quicker four-beat rhythm and ράηο horos in even Faster two time. uonatistos is in effect the transitional phase horn kato horos to ράηο horos, for which reason it is danced as an interlude between these two phases of the dance. Ί uung Olymhians also dance other Greek folk dances. such as kefaionitikos, kalamatianos, haniotikos, pentozalis and syrtos. Non-circular dances, Mich as hasapikos and /ennhekikos are not danced at Olymbos, 2 5 neither are the dances of mainland Greece, hasaposorvikos and tsamikos.26 Ballroom dances such as the tango and wall/ arc never danced either. The < )lymhians regard kmo horos, gonatistos and ράηο horos as distinct but interdependent parts ol a single entit). This unity is known as the d a n c e " (horos) or, more precisely, "the Olymbos dance" (O Otymbitikos horos), mtradistinction to any other dance, which is regarded ireign (xe~nos) even it' the community is familiar with In; example the folk dances of other regions o! Greece, which are danced by the younger generation- It should be noted, however, thai the dancers at \ roukounda did not dance dances from elsewhere until after the ( tiyrabOS dance was over. I hough regarded as parts ol the same whole, there are essential differences in the structure of the A.iio horos and ράηο horos. Kmo horos has an additional dimension of theg/cfit// ritual, namely song, and throughout its duration both the male dancers and the memkiidhes '"ai the heart of the dance" sing mandinadhes to the female dancers. These mandinadhes arc not improvised expressions ol ικΐιχ idualism but an integral pari of a community dialogue set in motion by the meraklidhes. Such dialogues are always initiated in those instances where the glendi is confined to singing only. Since only men sins.• in public, and since dance without women is inconceivable, all-male giendia are known as andristika (for men) or. more imonly, kathista (seated). Dance as the Culmination Parousia ol the Glendi through the Structurally and functionally, kato horns is the replete manifestation o( the marriage ol song and (.lance, fot which reason it constitutes the culmination of the ritual process of the traditional glendi. The mandinadhes sung in the kato phase of the dance reflect the traditional relationship between sell and community, since the concept ot community in pre-War Olymbos was noi understood in metaphysical but in interpersonal terms. Consequently, anyone who disagreed with what was being said 01 tnacted in the dance voiced his opinions in the form of mandinadhes, engaging in a metrical dialogue with whoever held views to the contrary. These dialogues led ι it nail ν ιό the pronouncement in poetic form of the community verdict in those instances where evaluations of the social comportment o\ certain persons and families were disputed. For this reason ι hose taking part in the 17» dance were particular!) careful of what they said and did at the parous/./. Feat o\ criticism was accompanied b> unbounded respect lot what took place at the parousia. The mandinadhes of the dance bound both the singers and the individuals to whom they relerred, precise!) because they publicized certain personal opinions on other members ol the community. This community committment is epitomized in the common expression " H e said thai al the dance" . or its equivalent "He said thai al the parousia In pie Wat Olymbos die assemblv ol the comimn al the dance consthuied the supreme people's court. I el us iook at an example. In the early 1940s a school teacher and a kaoakaris (large land-owner) wanted to marry the same girl, herself a kanakaria (a first boi η daughter with property). Although the girl preferred the landless but virile and spirited (meraklls) teacher, her parents were pressuring her to accept the kanakarTS because he was ol their social rank. At a glendi in the coffee shop (i.e. an all-male affair) the teacher challenged his rival, singing: Come, let s go together to the so everyone sees \ou .md me Leave your /arms at Avlona to lie mekeme The word tne&ejnes is the Turkish equivalent of parousia and the expression " t h e fields al Avlona standardized phrase alluding synecdochtcall) to the kanakaris, since a diacritic ol the class of kanakaridhes land kanakariis) was ownership of the largest and most fertile fields on the plain al \\lona. Interpersonal Evaluations and Dance At a literal level the symbolism of the traditional dance concerns relations between persons and ai a metaphorical one relations between an archetypal indiv idual the ideal Olymbian man and woman and the community he or she represents.- In the dance the presence ol all the dancers, and especially of the young girls, was evaluated οι assessed. In the context of these evaluations, the participants in the glindi actively experienced their community not as a homogeneous or competitive construct but as an interpersonal mode of coexistence with tl Fellow villages, with whom they shared a day-to-daj socio-culiural reality. The tais* m d'etre of the dance was to assess the positive qualities of the female participants as prospective brides in the Olymbos marriage market. 2 8 However, the iniei personal structure of the community permitted the expression not only ol commendation but also ol censure, for in the person of a toil dancer her entire family was judged, as well as ils relationships ol alliance or ant agonism with other families in the community. Thus ι lie exchange of mandinadhes praising or reproving the abil hies and attributes of specific dancers was not o\ HI individual personal nature. The personal element at once formed and was formed b) the interpersonal functional framework of the community, through the parousia. this explains why the Olymbians were so solicitous about sending theii children to the dance: it was there that the symbolic value (prestige standing and esteem) ol a person and Ins family in the community was absolutely and irrevocably determined I. ( nmim-iulalions I \ei> in.iledancei had a moral obligation ΙΟ sine abOUl his female dancers, publicizing the personal and familial virtues oi each. Systematic indifference to a particular girl on the pail of the male dancers constituted one of the most severe forms of criticism of her. One of the gravest insults levelled at an unmarried woman was to call her "unsung" (atra(gh)oudisti), which means she has not been sung about at the dance. ( consequently the common expression Go away, unsung girl'" implied that the woman thus addressed was, in the eves ol the community, a person unvvorihv of comment. Because a person s prestige was directly linked with the standing and esteem of his family, mothers indicated to their daughters suitable persons to dance next to. Good positions were those next to renowned meraklidhes or to young men regarded as potential bridegrooms 1 he meraklidhes sang to the girl dancers, praising their appearance: their facial features, careful allirc and comportment in the dance. Their remarks were couched in phrases drawn from a common aesthetic conception concerning the ideal features o\ the female face. 1 01 example, a dancer was qualified as round-faced", "archfine-featured". At a dance held during the Italian Occupation, one merakla extolled the beamy ol a round-faced dancer in the following manner: / tove <u;in tut face is like one and yout checks! the) 're Itki- the apples of Aivali. Ii was most unusual to compare the physical beauty rl dancers al the gletnli and when this occurred the aesthetic evaluation ol the persons was in effeci a metaphoi foi a moral and social evaluation o\ then families. 1 el us eonsidei an example. At a dance held during the Italian < tecupation, two men argued in mandinadhes comparing the physical beauty οϊ their dancers, who happened to be theii daughters. In this poetic duel the two is compared the colour of the girls hair, eyes and iplexion on the one hand the "black (dark) colouring ol the brunette and on the other the " w h i l e " (light) colouring of the blonde. The father of ι he lair haired dancei sang: Γ6ί 'white" girls arc pretty the 'whhe' girls are loved so say the J;trk ' ones to comfort themselves The lather of the dark-haired dancer immediately retorted: Ihc mountain snou is white hut the swine irc.it/ on it cloves .in- black but agas then them I he second mandinadha reveals the metaphoi character ol the aesthetic assessment of the girl dancers bv their dancers/fathers. The contrasting of the words swine and agas' alludes to the social distinction between the uncouth laeklanders and the cultured landowners [kanakaridhes). C onsequenth. the father of the brunette disparages the family of the blonde dancei ially infaioi to his own. Such associations between the physical beamy of a dancei and hei socio-economic status were commonplace, provided ol course ι he girl had both physical and economic endowments. Being community events, the dances were open in all, irrespective oi social or economic criteria. I andless male dancers frequently sang ίο proper lied girls ik.iti.ik.tries), approbating their beauty and wealth, even though they were well aware they could never marry them. \l a dance held during the Italian Occupation a landless dancer sane to a kanakaria: \l\ are hut .in love s eves not so dark her archc*.! brows a hitler, hurning desire )••!! have houses three-storeys a courtyard laid with pebbles whoevet sees it his mind remains there high The contrast between the economic poverty and the symbolic wealth (prestige) represented by a man o\ lowci rank bin an acknowledged merakJis was often a subjeel for discussion al the dance. 3 0 In pre Wa ι Olymbos laeklanders were usually poor, but symbolic wealth was the prerogative ot anyone, regardless oi aye. gender oi economic stains. I or the Olymbians I hose spiritual attributes ol a person which had community value were the content of symbolic wealth. One such trail was tner.ikliki. that is a person's ability to lead a companv ol singcis and dancers to enthusiasm (Ac//), into thai high-spirited state of mind essential ιο experiencing the parousia ot ι he community I el us consider an example. Al a dance held in ι he village square during the Italian Occupation, an Olymbian lad, \ikos. danced with two cirls who were schoolmates from the village of Othos in the south of Karpathos. Nikos" father, Kosmas, and his paternal grandfather, Nikolis, were ai 'the heart of the dance "'. Al one point Kosmas sang a mandinadha to his son: v.'A.'s. / grant you leave to sing to please \iUii two sehoolt'riends And his grandfather Nikolis immediately continued: I7!> Sing to ι hem Kikoli*. let's see it you are like mc that you "ill not dishonour me wAcf> you go take pan in the dance To which Kosmas rejoined: F;tiher. you did not give us vineyards or estates yon just endowed us well with tnerakiiki And Finally, old Nikolis: Tonight s dam .ill anomalies since the un-moustached are mixed up with the moustached Did tht\\ give me anything? Hint I anything to give you? I owed two grossia when I wed and I could not repay them Apart from tlie distinction between economic and symbolic wealth, the foregoing dialogue reflects the ace hierarchy of family as well as community relations in pic War Olymbos. While kosmas allows his young son Nik OS to sing al the dance, in front oi older glendistcs, his talher (and Nikos grandfather), old Nikolis, an acknowledged meraklis, justifies this breach of etiquette in terms acceptable \o the community: he wants to see whether his grandson and namesake will prove himself worthy o\ him as a meraklis. I he dialogue reveals that the merakliki is a talent which sons inherit from then agnaies. litis implies that goods with symbolic value may be inherited by two unites: the biological and the cultural. I raditionally. it was believed thai a person's Spiritual faculties were inherited from forebears renowned in ihccommunitj Γοι possessing such characteristics. Complementary to. and not in competition with, the idea of biological inheritance is the transmission of material property (dowry) and social titles from one generation to the next in accordance with a custom.π > 2 inheritance system,* m which the first-born son and first-born daughter inherit the property ot the lather and of lhe mother respectively. I here is a naming obligation for the transfer of properly bj the endower to the endowed: the bo> takes the name of his father's lather and ι he giil that of her mother's mother. I; is, however, worth noting thai in the case of the foregoing dialogue, old Nikolis is landless not because he was horn late and thus had no claims to proper!\ hut because, although a first-born son, he had been disinher ited by his father foi disobeying him and marrying a landless woman. So, on (he one hand old Nikolis jus to his descendants the lack ol a legacy of land property (due to his disinheritance) and, on the other, he uses the onomastic dimension ol the customary inheritance system to rati. • his biological bequest of the tnerakiiki to his namesake grandson. 77?e Dance as an Object ol Evaluation Glendi in the Post- Η ar In pre-War Olymbos the old men were custodians of moral and ritual order in the glendi and the dance. Not 180 onl\ did young men refrain from singing in from of their elders, thev were generally discouraged from participating actively in glendia. I lowcvei, those who were particularly talented or well prepared were invited 10 sing b\ Lhe revellers (g/endYsfes) themselves, as happened in Nikos case since Unification with Greece, o\ so the traditional meraklidhcs maintain, the institutions ol theglendi and the dance have been less rigidly observed and the young people's former fear of and respect foi ι heir elders has been lost forever. In 1950 an old meraklis sans.' from the "heart of the dance" : In addition to then physical beaut) and economic wealth, girls were commended lor iheii decorum al the dance. Λ good dancer, in traditional eves, was one who danced pano tis (lit. on herself) 01 MO nychi (lit. on (he toe-nail), thai is in a disciplined manner, without running and without dragging or being dragged by othei dancers. Her movement was such that the male dancer in the k was able to concentrate on the execution o) his figures, ensuring him controlled contact with the rest of the dance. In turn the good male dance) performed his intricate steps llsalomia) at the head of the chain without imposing liis weight on lhe girl dancer next to him. In lhe closing ν ears ol ihc Italian occupation, a meraklis sang al a glendi: is Spring adorns this tickle earth so an experienced (female) dan be/V/s the dunce \ :er Unification writ Greece, the phenomenon ot mcrakiidhes praising not onlj the girl dancers bui the nal dance appeared. I he purpose ol such commenda tions was to remind theglcndistOS ol the pre War unity ol ι heir society. \s a symbol of the Olymbian community, the dance alleviated lhe anxiety o\ xenilia (lhe exile of expatriation), which was associated with alienation from shared values. \i a pre-Wai glendi on one Shrove Monday, a meraklis sang from the h e m of the d a n c e " : How lovely is the dance, it only it were every day, if only Shrove Monday came every neck II. (ensures Λ giil s, 01 more correctl> her family s, interest in a man as a prospective bridegroom was an open secrei in the community. I he same held lor the preferences ol the unmarried youths and their families with regard to potential brides, lhe Olymbians spoke of those young boys and girls whose relationships were publicly known as sweethearts ι Krmastoj). armastoi met daily and slaved together until late in the evening in lhe gUTs home, always in the company ol her parents. I bus young men and women got to know each other well before marriage. The prospective bridegroonvs acquaintance with his sweetheari & family was particularly important given tfiat in Olymbos matrilocal residence is the norm. In these circum stances of family -controlled contact between sweethearts there was no shir on a girl's reputation should she turn her attentions towards another \rmastos, il het relation ship with the first failed to flourish, ι raditionally, girls always danced next to thcit sweel hearts. Any unjustified breach of this norm provoked stringent criticism by the elderly singers at the heart of the dance'". However, a girl's decision not to dance next to hei irmastOS was very rarely her own, since her actions reflected the opinions of her family, and primarily o t h e r moth • Such instances frequently ended in family frays, since the antagonists exchanged insulting mandinadht the dance. Let us look at a tew examples. On a Shrove Monday during the Italian Occupation the sweetheart of one young man. V danced at the side of another male dancer. Seeing this affront, a severe meraklis, B, sang to \ \ storm has broiten on the there will be damage fot i sec the bee inn she ignores the thyme I he doubly insulted dancei mountains Λ replied immediately, ing his song at both his sweetheart and bis critic: You're neithei sotu to discard you nor sweel for me to eat /ca\e other folks' vineyards a/one and fence your own 1 he first two lines of his mandinadha reflect Vs assessment of his sweetheart's character. Likening the girl to an edible fruit, which one discards if it is sOUl or eats it u is sweet, he declares his total indifference to her lie reels neither repulsion nor passion. The second two lines are directed at B. whom Λ advises >p interfering in the affairs ol others and to attend to his own family problems. When A sang this part all those present understood its deeper meaning: B's sister had shocked the community by flirting, lightly but openly, with an Italian soldier. \ was alluding indirectly to this act and us social consequences tor B\ family, stressing that a peison whose moral integrity is open to question has not the right to judge publicly the actions of his fellow .'IS. At anothet pie War feast a girl returned to her place In tin dance alongside her armastos after a long interval, during which she had danced at the side of another man. Hei armastos reacted immediately, singing: You came and turned my heart to stone And broke h into pieces mid the mandinadhes I shall sing will be for link eves onh The expression 'Tor Turk eyes only (i.e. worthless) has negative implications: what is μοού for the l u r k s is not meet fot the Greeks, in this case the Olympians. The juxtaposing of the community symbol, mandinadhes, and ι he expression ol otherness, tor Turk cvesonlv ". reflects at a societal level the personal conflict between the sweethearts. I or the singer, his former sweetheart is no longer a familial person but a stranger: thus the expression of Otherness "for Turk eyes only"' explains, and is explained by, the guTs estranging behaviour. In contrast, the singer presents himseil as an ideal representative ol the Olymbian community - t h e improper behaviour of someone eKe, his former companion nuns his heart 10 stone" and 'breaks ii into pieces". I hough in the in si two lines the singer expresses his personal feelings .UK\ opinion of the girl, in the second two he makes a more general declaration, that there is no place at theparousia fot anything alien to Olymbos cull The parousia is respected and honoured by all tradi lional Olymbians. In pre-Wai Olymbos ii was inconceiv able that anyone, man or woman, act individually in the dance. Any such behaviour prompted the immediate and implacable reaction of the older glendistes, who assumed ad hoe responsibility as judges and as guardians ol tradition. The offender was punished in exemplary fashion being exposed to public ignominy at the parousia. Public punishment of culprits was both corporal (beating) and ntual: the glendistes fired remonstrat ive mandinadhes at the tran&grcssoi of community order, stigmatizing his name and thai of his family One category ol offenders ol community mores was treated leniently by traditional Olymbians. I hese were the tsamouridhes, which in Olymbian dialect means "those who misbehave when intoxicated"'. Oral tradition cites cases ol glendistes who. under the influence Of too much alcohol, insulted girl danceis by touching (hem in an unseemly manner or kissing them in the dance. To avoid anv physical contact between the male and female danceis the hold was such thai the male dancer did not clasp a n l s hand but her handkerchief, winch she held fot this very reason. In the conservative society of olymbos even the slightest brush of the male dancer s bodj against that of a girl could be construed as an affront to her honour and thai ol her family. I ei us consider an example. At a prc-Wat glendi one dancer, V kissed a girl of highei social rank. He did so in order to dishonour the girl in public and so force her parents to let him marry her. since according to custom no-one else would take to wife a girl who " h a d been kissed'". Immediately after the kiss, \ sang: / pinched, I kissed I snatched the tender shoot (to pachari) and you became like a parched twig such as donkeys eat I he term pachari usually means lard or fat, but here a has particularly positive connotations being used in the sense of the cream on the milk, implying the "cream"' ol (Ml the community. By pinching and kissing the young kanakaria m public, ihe singer maintains thai he has : hei social value - taken away tier " c r e a m " , that is Iter moral integrity. Her transformation into a "parched twig ' alludes metaphorical!) to her social fall: she is now so ordinary thai even the donkeys (that is the iacklanders) can eat Iter (that is marry her). I he insult committed by A was major and he was given a severe thrashing b> the other gtendistes. I le had not only ot tended the girl dancer and her Fanrtil) but also the community, since aftei his immoral act he had boasted of it ai thep&rousia. \ s self-centred behaviour roused public feeling and the giendistes punished him tor his immorality as well as his sliamelessncss. However, because \ was a habitual tsamoiiris, the mcraklidhes refrained from branding him - as they would certain!) have d^uc in an) other case with reproving mandinadhes. One general observation concerning the breaches of community customs in pre-Wai < Hymbos. Frequently the offenders are persons ol lower .social rank, while llie fiduciaries of tradition arc either kanakarkthes or persons who. on account of their employ, are socio economical!) dependent on them field guards, teachers, artisans and priests. Precisely because of their marginality. Ihe phenomena ot undisciplined behaviour al the pari reflect, overtly or covertly, the underprivileged peoples discontent with ihe hegemony of the kanakaridhes. This issue, which concerns the relationship between traditional culture and politics in Olymbos, will be discussed in detail below. From the Censure ot Persons /o (he C ensure of Customs ice Unification Ihe symbolism of ihe glendi has undergone radical changes The traditional merakhdhes complain thai the modem Olymbians no longer commend their fellow villagers bul flatter them, and instead of focusing their mandinadhes On the young girl dancers publicize the social progress ot those young male emigrants who have obtained a university degree Ol established a profitable business. Λι a dance held in Rhodes in the 1970s, Olymbians living there sane congratulations to a young Olymbian man who had recent Iv qualified as a medical doctor. Annoyed bv this breach of custom, a traditional merakb's remonstrated in son•• u bat they *aid is changing the customs and the fashion the} .ίο longer praise ihe girls, who are i'ur lovely roses Oft have l censed (praised) other one'•. whoever they might be tun I don Ί do M) any mot not even tot nn close friends I lis mandinadhes express the dramatic modification of the glendi in recent decades, thai is the 1970s and 1980s, \s other mcraklidhes pointed out at ihe festival of Ai-Vannis in 19X4. contemporary Olymbian dance has I8L' changed from being a symbolic rile to a ritual ol exhibitionism. I he male and female dancers do not attend (he dance ΙΟ express through experience (and to experience through expression) their cultural unity, as was the ease in the old days. I hey no longer discover the transformative force ot traditional discourse and the symbolic way of lite. Young men dance in order to be seen dancing, to convince those present thai the> arc good Olymbians and therefore, if unmarried, desirable bridegrooms I he same is true for ι κ. \v the traditional mcraklidhes point out, modern Olymbians are not interested in the seated (kathisio) glindi, nor in the kato horo\s. Hie modernglendi is almost totally confined to the phase of the ράηο horos and the tional relationship between the g/endi as a whole, of which dance is a pan, has more 01 less vanished. More over, the disengagement of the dance from ι he glindi has facilitated the rise in popularitv ol evening dances, an institution cultivated bj Olymbian emigrants, both in {ireecc and abroad, emulating ι lie bourgeois halms of ι lien reign" fellow citizens. The Dance in Post Wat Olymbos In its modern form, ihe dance with its musk constitutes an autonomous whole, completely diseng from song. The outcome ol this separation ο I the iradi tional glendi into two parts dance and song has been that each of the two elements has evolved differently and. ol course, different meanings have been attached to litem. \\ hereas the dance and music have been commercialized, song (that is the extempore mandinadhes exchanged at the kathisto glendi or in the kato horos) has been margin alized. I litis, tot the tew remaining traditional merakhdhes song nowadays constitutes the only vital symbol of Ihe old Olymbian unity, the part which alludes toth« whole, the pre-Warglendi. Those who were once ardent defendants o\ the unity ol song, music and dance, disniss lent Olymbian dance and music as tr.utv alien' to Olymbos, the Olymbos of ihe traditional gtendi. The giindi and Ihe dance are public cultural events and .is such have been used as arenas of competition by different social groups with opposing economic and political interests. These anatagonistic relations have determined the various strategic interpretations and manipulaiio: tradition" and of the "traditional" dance HI particular. One such relationship concerns the clash between traditionalists and nco-traditionalists over the issue o\ the degeneration of olymbian mores and, in particular, that of the commercialization of the dance. HI. Ihe (nmnu'rciali/aliiin of the Dunce The following four Statements, made in I9N9, are tvpica! reflections o\ how contemporar) Olymbians view ihe evolution of their customs. 1. "Nowadays the instrument-players have neither homeland nor religion. I hey only worship monc 2. " T o d a j s voung men and women ate not intet learning our customs. I tic men don'l sing any more and the girls no longer wcui the costume. That s wh) CHymbos has become foreignized {xenepsen)." ι ι he money they've brought from abroad the emigrants have ruined the glondi, the dance and all oui customs, rhey're the ones who've destroyed < Hyiiih'is J I r >; η μ u> revive 'tradition' (paradhosi) is like trying lo revive a corpse, ι he quicker we realize that, the sooner we'll shed our poverty and misery. Though expressing conflicting opinions, the foregoing statements reflect the common awareness that modern Olymbos is in the throes of a social and cultural crisis. The Olymbians link this crisis with the abandoning traditional customs on the one hand and with the commercialization ol the g/endt on the other. Some blame the emigrants for tins crisis, others the young and siill others the supporters ol customs"" and '"tradition". ι he commercialization ol ihtgtendi, and in particular ol the dance and music, is ol special concern to modern ibians, being a standard subject for discussion both at formal events (the dance or the giendt) and in casual rsations (in the coffee shop, at work, at home). Because ail opinions voiced refer, direct!) or indirectly. io the question of customs, i shall examine the process .ι commercialization of the dance and musk, by exploring the different strategies employed by groups with rival economic and social interests in order to assert themselves politically through the giendi. I he commercialization ol the Olymbos dance is a complex social and cultural phenomenon mainlv observed since die 1960s. I shall present I he circumstances in which this transformation lias taken place in three stages. First, I shall examine diachronically the issue of the payment ol the instrument-players. Second, I shall explain how dance markets have come into being on Karpathos. And third, 1 shall analyse the evolution of I lie significance of the dance as a cultural symbol through the current, and frequently contradictory, references ol Olymbians to their culture. In the development ol the last theme, I shall present the i> pieal significations and interpretations of the ideas of the "old" and the " n e w . a s these are expressed in traditionalist, neo traditionalist and modernist pOsl-Wai discourse The Musicians' Remuneration in Traditional Olymbos: i mm ihe Kanakaridhes* Barley to the Emigrants' Money According to the testimonies of elderly Olymbians. musicians like the priests, teachers and physicians, were paid fot then services to the community. The musicians received an annual payment, made at harvest time. 1 3 Before World War II each family-producer put aside four Dkas of barley, foi the musicians, a quantity equivalent to a reaper's daily wage. When all the contributions had been gathered in the musicians divided the barley into equal lions between themselves, according to their numbei The musicians remuneration was rather small in comparison with thai ol other, artisans, such as ihc blacksmith fot example, who received eighteen okas of barley from every producer - this was the highest fee, I his considerable difference was due in ι he fact lhai in pie W ai Olymbos the playing ol musical instruments was not regarded as a means of earning a living but as a service to the giendistcs and. therefore, the community itselt. \s significant contributors to the creation ol theg/end/, good musicians (like the food singers and dancers) were honorifically dubbed meraklidhes. \nyone who distinguished himself as a meraklismusician acquired considerable symbolic value (prestige) in the community, The Olymbians exploited this possibility in various ways, depending on the social group lo which they belonged Certain!) all men, irrespective ol sot rank, played some instrument 01 other: large landowners, shepherds and craftsmen alike were all musicians. Dunne the 1 urkish occupation, the social hierarch O l y m b o s was based on land o w n e r s h i p . 14 There were three socio-economic strata: large landowners (kana ka ridhes), small landowners (mesa/or) and lack landers [troOtSOi). Shepherds and artisans were cither small land owners or lacklanders and were regarded by the kana karidhes as social inferiors. Thus, wheicas the kana karidhes ρ π instrument in order, as it were, to legitimize symbolical!) their social superiority, musicians from the Othei ranks plaved for two reasons: liisi io en hance their reputation and standing in the community, and second to profit from the albeit small hut neverthe less significant, in those days, paymenl in barley In addition to the annual remuneration in bailey. musicians received other payments on special occasions. \l weddings each player was given a large round loaf of bread, known as the gwa. \i one nuptial glondi of kanakaridh.es in the 1920s, the/yra-playci was a shepherd, thai isofinferioi social rank to the hosts. \i some point in the proceedings, the /yra-playei whispered a mandi nadha to his daughter in-law, criticizing the hosts for systematically ignoring him and, furthermore, for failing to give him ihegyra to which he was entitled. < >r, theadv ice of Ins dau ι law, the shepherd did noi sing the mandinadha out loud, lest he be misconstrued by lhose present as begging for food. The mandinadha was: For you I've feasted /.•.' you I've played the /•. Bui you, you have neglected me I even /os/ the gyra Apart from the obvious practical value oi ihegyra as a comestible, the shepherd used it metaphorical!) to stigmatize nol only default on a customary obligation but also a wider social injustice. More precisely, the shepherd wished to protest against the high-handedness of the kanakaridhes in general, who reproduced the everyday relationships ol social inequality even at [he giendi. I he shepherd s reaction to the kanakaridhes was not an isolated instance, bin rather a typical symptom ol a more general opposition which was tirsl expressed by IK'-i returning emigrants in the 1920s. The con From between the kanakaridhes and the emigrants was nevci 15 violent. The Inner expressed their aversion to the hegemonj of the former bv using the symbolic dimension of traditional mores to consolidate their social power in otbei words, they adopted the old strategy 01 the kanakaridhes. I luis the political rivalry between kanakaridhes and emigrants was expressed through traditional processes in different ritual contexts, and especial!) the glendi and the dance. This rivalry assumed the form of a confrontation between conservatives and innovators, supported by the kanakaridhes and the emigrants respectively. I innovative element which had been promoted bj the emigrants since the beginning of the twentieth century was the greater economic and symbolic value ol monej over land. Eventually, in the post-Wat period, as a result of the emie,rant>>' effective manipulation ol customs conduction with the latent opposition of the non-pri\ ι ίο the kanakaridhes, the community was obliged to accept the affluent lacklanders as social equals in the kana karidhes, who though maintaining then traditional prestige, ceased to dominate the social ami cultural life ol Olymbos. I In.• ()lymbos of ι he A;.//).iAarid/)cs was a closed peasant society with an exchange cconomj based on the circulation of local agricultural produce and slock-reaiing products within lhe village. A consequence of these ecoru relationships was that money had no purchasing but only symbolic value (as pan of the kolaina). The Olymbian market was gradual!) transformed into a mixed (producing and monetary) one as the emigrants introduced and established monetary wealth as a socio-economic value superioi ι»' land ownership. Dunce and Money The lust Olymbian emigrants went to the United States .>• America at the beginning of the century, ["hose of them who were good musicians made a lot of nuiiin playing at the glandia of other (Carpathian immigrants. According to the testimony ol one elderly Olymbian. his lather lone of the first emigran; terica) earned as much as a daily wage by playing (samboona tot a tew hours ai the glendia of expairiale southern (Carpathians (katohorires). 3 6 The titst affluent emigrants returned to Olymbos in the early ll)2<)s. Inlent on bridging the social gap between themselves and the kanakaridhes, they spent large sums on social projects: they offered money to the church and frequently organized public glendia and dances. At these lattei events the emigrants paid the musicians handsomely to sing laudatory mandiiu'uihcs. \l six weddings held in Olymbos in 1928, for instance, the musicians earned 5(H) drachmas each: in those days the dailv wage of an unskilled labourer was 5 drachmas, and ol a skilled one In pre-War Olymbos, on Shrove Monday, musicians and other meraklidhes used to sing commendations and IK4 good wishes ι ο the newly-married couples. Phis custom, known as fotimisma, was the only occasion on which ihe musicians received money, provided Ol course this was I he emigrants' reactkmisi movement to the kana karidhes was curtailed in the 1930s and 40s Alter the domination ol Fascism in lialy restrictions were imposed on the issue of emigration permits and the Olymbians w< ι impelled to lill the soil in ordei to sut χ ive. I his turn ol events was to the economic and ideological advantage ol the kanakaridhes, many of whom amassed considerable wealth during World Wat II, from sellingtheir barley on the black market, particular!) to affluent katohorites (southerners).'" The Fascist period of the Italian occupation and the Wai years until I nification enabled the kanakaridhes to regain theii hegemony in Olymbian society, since land proved to be of greater value than money, whose purchasing power was diminished b\ inflation. The Glendi Market on Karpathos I. The Southern (katohoritiki) Market The cultural repercussions of mass emigration in the post-War period began to be Feb in the mid 1960s and were crystallized in new social structures and strategies in the 1970s. One of the most important innovations rcsull from emigration was the creation by retaining katohorites a local market lor ihe "traditional KarpathJanglendi. \s in earlier limes, in this period too, the reincorporation ol each Karpathian emigrant in the community Of his home village was effected through song and dance. In response to the development ol a Karpathian glendi market, ihe Olymbian musicians began to sell then traditional art in a most profitable manner. The musicians who play at katohoritika glendia are paid generously. I was told by one meraklis from Spoa that in the late 1980s the musicians' Fee Γοι playing at a wedding dance ranged from 600,000 drachmas minimum to 1,000,000drachmas on average. At one such occasion. ani/ed b) a Spoan emigrant in 1987, at an ove all cost ol some 7,000,000 drachmas, five musicians earned 2,700,000drachmas in one evening. In other words, each musician gamed more money thai nigh) than a civil servant earns in >ix months. I he traditional custom of parit) in shai ing the proceeds was short-lived. In no time an unscrupulous competil iveness developed between accomplished and amateur players, that resulted in the rise ol opportunism, Ihe commercialization of Karpathian music was accompanied by a new way of remunerating the players. During the 1980s the established Karpathian musicians agreed befoi hand with the organizers o! ihe glendi on then partici pation fee, and in addition to this shared the money collected al the dance equally with their less known colleagues. No such commercial agreements between musicians and ihe organizers of a dance have vet been contracted in Olymbos, Ihe Olymbian musicians implement a bilateral strategy: when they play outside Olymbos the) agree on iheii fee beforehand (as do the katohorites), bui when the) play in Olymbos they conscientious!) avoid doing so, lest they be accused of capitalizing on tradition - being "traders in customs" teir fellow villagers. //. The Olymbos Market Mthough Olymbian musicians piav all over Karpaihos, "foreign" (that is non-Olymhian) musicians only rarely come to play in Olymbos, Hiis is mainly due to the fact thai southern (kmo) Karpathos is more economical!) developed than Olymbos. As a consequence of this one-sided economic development, olymbian builders, electricians and other craftsmen work in virtually ever) > η Karpathos, while no katohoritis is employed in Olymbos. lhis asymmetry has deep historical roots. During the 1840s the economic base of kuto Karpathos shitted from ulture to trade, whereas Olymbos. in contrast, clung to its traditional peasant economy and culture until the end ot the 1950s. 40 I \v. kanakaridhes played a decisive role in maintaining ι he peasant mode of production since, through their hegemonic strategies, the) legitimized the reproduction of the existing system of economic and social inequality. The kanakaridhes cultivated an intense localism, which was based on the peculiar nature of Olymbian agricultural tradition lo which they gave ;i mythical dimension. This hegemonic localism was a means of including or excluding ι. i.l their customs) in relation 10 the dominant ideotog) ol the traditional Olymbian community, V .1 consequence of this localistic strategy of the kanakaridhes, combined with the factor ο Γ geographical isolation, Olymbos maintained its rural character and remained a culturally closed society, despite the frequent contacts of Olymbians with the commercial and industrial world outside Karpathos. In any case, though in the pre-Wai period localism cultivated xenophobia, aftet the \\ai ι; functioned as a pretext for uniting Olymbians everywhere into a single neo-iraditional communit) I he dance market in < Hymbos is seasonal and local in ICtcr. I -very \ear in August Olymbos is swamped b) Olymbian emigrants from all over the world, who return lo the village with their children in order to introduce them to their compatriots, to show them the place and its •us and. finally, to give them the opportunity ol dancing together with their fellow villagers. I he dances held m August are therefore rituals ot initiation for the young and rituals of unification lor the Olymbians of the diaspora. Through these dances Olymbians create and maintainaneo-tiathiion.il community. A specific localist feature ol the summer communit) is its marked endogamic character, in August most of the wedding arrangements are made between Olymbians, a large proportion 01 which end in marriage, celebrated within the month. 4 2 I ike the returning emigrants in the ll>2(K. those of las well as other ucll-oll ()lymbians) spend a great deal of money on dances, aiming at the same symbolic advantages as their forebears More precisely, today's affluent Olymbians seek through the dance lo publicize their economic status and express their preferences •,>ι certain girls as prospective brides, I hese new strategies arc disguised by an ideolo;. alism intent 0Π the revival of "tradition"'. The male dancers use the traditional symbols of Olymbian culture in neo-lraditional ways in order to "re-create" the "old communit ν as well as 10 promote themselves, lhis practice has led 10 the development of a market ol Olymbian "tradition . primarily in the form of the August dances. Dance and Music: New Practices, Ve» Interpretations The disengagement of the dance and music from the glendi, and their consequent commercialization, are svmptoms ol the dramatic cultural change modern Olymbos is undergoing. In essence lhis change is the transition from a traditional way ot hie 10 a syncretism of traditional, neo-lraditional and modernizing tendencies. The advocates of modernization reject outright all that is " o l d " , whether traditional or neo-traditional, and seek the radical restruc luring o\ Olymbos after the model o\ modern Oreek small towns. Thus lor them the question of commercialization o\ the "old dance and music does not exist. This is ;i problem that exists tor the traditionalists and the neo-tradi tionalists, who differ substantially in their approaches to symbolism m general and to the symbolism of iheghfndi and o( the dance in particular Traditional symbolism is based on the dialectical relationship between a whole and its parts According 10 this view, the symbolism ol ihe glendi both gives meaning to and is given meaning by the symbolism of its parts Ihe song, the music and the dance. Moreover, in traditional symbolism the dynamic ot ihegtendi as a whole transcends the sunt ol the dynamics of its components, lhis is achieved through the creative juxtaposition of the partial activities ol the glendi. Thus, when someone sings a mandinadha at the dance his voice becomes the voice ol 3 the community.* In other words, the song and the dance are not an end in themselves; ihey aie symbolic processes which lead ihe glendistes to the experience id their community On the contrary, neo-traditional symbolism > not concerned with relations o\ wholeness but with relations of division. The outcome o1 this approach is the reduction of the glendi from a whole to its parts: the sealed glCndi and ihe ράηο horos. The splitting up of the giiadi reflects the transition from one mode ol symbolism 10 another, In ordei ι distinguish between the opposing tendencies of traditional and neo-traditional symbolism I shall refer to them as W h o l e " and " p a n " respectively. Hiis distinction does not mean thai neo-traditional symbolism does not have a holistic character but thai the part does not lead iranscendenially lo the whole. The traditional concept o\ entity is wider than the neo-traditional one of totality. This is in effect ihe main difference between traditional and nco traditional l> symbolism. While ihe former creates (and is recreated through) relations of coexistence in an entity in which the parts maintain their existential independence, the second generates (and is regenerated through) competitive rela tions ot division into parts which, though forming a totality, do not permit transcendence to a wider whole. To be specific, the traditional Olymbian community is based on relations of coexistence between its members, while, on the contrary, the modern Olymbian world does not constitute a community in this sense, but a sum of groups with conflicting interests, each one of which seeks to impose its own view OO the question of "tradition"". However, their efforts are hampered by the lack of one element, namely the transcendental dimension of the process of the glendi, which is the holistic mode of symbolic expression of the community. This distinction between whole/traditional and part/neo-traditional symbolism facilitates the critical examination of the phenomenon of commercialization of the dance and music. One general observation is that the traditional mode of experiencing the community has been virtually supplanted by a neo-tradiiional ideology which seeks to revive community life as an antidote to the crisis caused by modernization. Seen from this angle, traditional experiences have been transmuted into neo traditional ideological tenets. The t ransition from t he symbolism of the whole to ι he symbolism of the part created and legitimized the need for the auionomous development of some components in relation to others. Such disengagements were accompanied by further divisions into parts and new autonomous developments. A charactei istic example of such tendencies is that not only have the dance and the music become independent oi' the glendi but the partial entities oi the music and the dance have been differentiated. In other words, both the musical and the dance tradition have lost their long-standing symbolic character and have been transformed into forms which accelerate new disengage ments within the dance itself or the musical process. Below I shall mention some of the structural changes brought about by the neo-traditional approach, summarily lor Ihe instruments and in greater detail for the dance. The Evolution of the Instruments The most important change in the symbolism of the instruments is the disassociation of the lyra from the tsamboura and the consequent rapid development of the former at the expense of the latter. Before World War II the Olymbians regarded the lyra and tsambouna as integral parts of a musical entity, known by the term fyrotsimbouna. Disengagement of the lyra from the lyrotsambouna began in the early 1960s and was completed within the next two decades. The time and manner in which the independent development of the lyra (in relation to the glendi) was effected in conservative Olymbos differs from its course in more cosmopolitan kato Karpathos. Nevertheless, in is., both cases the process of disengagement was directly influenced by the post-War development of the Cretan lyra, which is linked with the urbanization and "Western ization"' of Greek traditional music in general. 4 3 In those places where the violin has not actually replaced the traditional lyra as a folk musical instrument, it has substantially influenced both the way the instrument is made and the technique of its playing. The Cretan and the Karpathian lyra lie at opposite ends ot that spectrum which reflects the influence of the European violin on the (iieek lyra: the Cretan lyra has been affected most, the Karpathian one least. 4 4 However, the subsequent devel opment of the Cretan lyra as a folkloric element and as a symbol of authentic Cretan identity has also had a decisive influence on the promotion of the karpathian lyra as the main instrument in the dance after the 1960s. Thus the transition from traditional to neo-traditional symbol ism in the intruments at Olymbos was achieved: the Λ/a replaced the lyrotsambouna as the symbol of Olymbian identity"'. Nowadays the traditional meraklidhes censure the musicians who use elements from modern Cretan music when playing Olymbian tunes. Moreover, the same critics dismiss the new way of playing, as well as any morpho logical, functional or performative innovation concerning the indigenous instrument(s), characterizing every devi ation from traditional practice as " C r e t a n " , that is "foreign" {\cni). This attitude is mainly based on the judgement of the elderly meraklidhes. who associate the Cretan influence on their musical tradition with the com mercialization of the dance. Conversely, those in favour of innovative trends in playing the lyru accuse the old /-players of playing like the bagpiper (tsambounistika), that is without a range of chromatic tones. One Cretan innovation applied to the Olymhian lyru is the replacing of the middle string originally of gut, with one of wire. This change was made to boost the instrument's acoustics so that it could be played out of doors, where the large dance events are usually held. Λ further innovation is that the modern Olymbian lyra is tuned to a higher pitch than the traditional one, to a point which makes the elderly singers resentful since they arcunable to sing such high notes. The structural changes made to the lyra have enabled Ihe instrument io evolve independently, not only of the tsambouna but also of the very spirit of the traditional glendi: the /yra-player has ceased to be a musical colleague of the singers and has become the prime regulator of ihe glendi and the dance. The New Dance and Local Criticism The neo-traditional dance differs significantly from the traditional. As in new Olymbian music. SO in contempor ary dance the symbolism of parts holds sway rather than of the whole.This development legitimizes the disen gagement of the dance from the glendi and, eventually. the commercialization of the glendi through iheeommei cialization of the dance. One of the most important innovations in today's dance is its fission into other, smaller dances. This phenomenon is mainly observed in the community feasts held in the summer, when the dance often numbers more than 150 participants. In such instances, two or three mcraklidhc•*musieians break the dance somewhere in the middle and dance the second half as a new dance. Sometimes, a third dance is created. This breaking of the dance is a bone ot contention for the Olymbians: traditionalists and neo-traditionalists accuse the musicians οι exploiting customs for their own ends. To be specific, the objectors contend that the fission of the dance denies the Olymbians the opportunity of fusing into a symbolic community, and that the musicians" motives are patently financial. On the other hand, the musicians justify their action by claiming that they offer a service to the community, explaining thai h> breaking the dance when it is very large they give all participants the chance to dance. A further dimension of the commercialization of the dance, apart from its fission, is the tactic of "tuning u p " . Musicians (particularly the lyra-players, who play the dance nines) use this ruse to increase their takings at any dance. The procedure is as follows: The /yra-player suddenly stops playing his instrument, as if to tune it. I his lakes him much longer than usual, since he pretends he has difficulties in adjusting his lyra to the other instruments. After several minutes he resumes playing, rather insipidly and indifferently. He then stops to retune his instrument. The /yr.i-player continues in this vein until the dancer at the head of the chain throws more money to the instruments or hands over his place to the next one. Musicians resort to this tactic as a non-offensive way of discouraging ungenerous dancers from dancing too long at the head of any particular dance. However, the musicians play with added zeal (kcl'i) for dancers who spend money, disregarding any ill-feeling they may create among those waiting to take their turn at the head of the dance. There are also instances where the opinions and actions of traditionalists and neo-traditionalists converge or coincide, such as the issue of the behaviour of young people at the dance. Many young men systematically avoid dancing the kaio horos, saying that it is " b o r i n g " and "outmoded". Moreover, they conspicuously flout the traditional formality of the dance: they join in wherever they wish, dance at the head of the chain for as long as they can, stay in the dance for only a short while and then leave. Traditional Olymbians view such conduct as absolutely "foreign" (xeni). Before World War II, when a dancer and the girls he was dancing finished their dance at the head of the chain, they remained in their place (next to (he new head of the dance) and supported the dance till the end. Traditionalists of all ages and middle-aged neo-traditionalists characterize the young people s behaviour as " m o d e r n " , that is "foreign", and for that matter, a problem for the community. The censurers complain that the young arc indifferent to Olymbian customs and see this tendency towards alienation as a symptom of the new, internal - as opposed to external exile (xcnilia) experienced by modern Olymbian•. is a result of the modernization of their way of life. The shift in people's interest from the traditionalglendi to the modern dance is reflected in the spatial arrangement of the chaperones to the girl dancers. Though they con tinue, as of old, to sit between the musicians and the dance, since the mid-1960s they have turned their backs to the musicians and their eyes on the dancers. This phenomenon is closely associated with the declining role of the elderly singers as coordinators of the dance (masters of ceremonies), a development exacerbated by the promotion of the musicians (and especially the /yra-players) as regulators of dance events. Since song has been detached from the dance, people are no longer able to form a critical "community" opinion on each cirl dancer and her family. Consequently, the chaperones must now judge for themselves the attributes and interests of the male dancers, assessing their economic and social status, as well as their marriage preferences, and observing and interpreting their non-verbal behaviour. To fulfill this obligation the chaperones have turned their gaze from the heart of the dance to the dance itself. Friction between traditionalists and non-traditionalists frequently stems from the rivalries between singers and musicians. A typical example of such friction is associated with a ritual process traditionally known as the kalcvasma (lit. lowering and slowing down) of the dance, that is the transition from pints to kaio horos: from dance only to a combination of dance and song. According to custom any of the singers taking part in the dance is entitled to effect this change-over (katevasma). In practice, however, only acknowledged meraklidhcs can take such initiatives, for the operation harbours the danger of causing a serious misunderstanding between the singer and the dancers, particularly those at the head and tail of the dance, who are obliged to wait until the mandinadhes are over before assuming (he lead position in pano horos. With the domination of the symbolism of parts at the expense of the whole, a problem has arisen with regard to the change-over of the dance. I he very few traditional singers who participate in modern glendia and dances avoid undertaking it. lest they be misconstrued by the dancers. On the other hand, the musicians exploit the sin gers' stance to justify their insistence on playing only pano and not kato horos, thus masking their ulterior economic motives. Not all contemporary musicians subscribe to this view. Some traditionalist players openly accuse their colleagues of cashing in on customs. To give an example, a /yra-player who lives abroad reproved the behaviour of a renowned /yra-player at the dance held on August 15th (feast of the Dormition of the Virgin) 1988, when the latter refused to "change-over" the dance so that the people could sing good wishes to the newly-married couples. Like the traditional musicians, many singers are self-critical in their approach to the problem of katcvasma. For example, in the opinion of one mcraklis-singer who 1K7 lives permanently in Rhodes, it is not the musicians who are responsible for anomalies in the dance but the singers. He accused the modern singers of acting according to personal, rather than community, criteria and interests, and of degenerating from being ι he regulators of ihc glendi to the opportunists of the dance. Despite the dramatic transition from the traditional symbolism of the glendi lo the neo-traditional independ ence Of the dance and music, the Olymbos dance continues to be a communtiy event. Phenomena observed elsewhere in Greece, such as special requests for particular songs and dances are not encountered in Olymbian celebrations and feasts. 46 The Olymbos dance may have been commercial ized but it has not been commodified, that is it has not become a folkloric trait like other Greek dances. 4 I he non-commodification of coniemporary Olymbian dance is due to its non-objectifical ion: it continues to be actively experienced as a community process. It is still not marketable because of the ideological dependence of the symbolism of the parts on the symbolism of the whole. The relation between old and new constitutes the cultural nucleus around which the neotraditional approach has developed as a response to the crisis of modernization which poses the false dilemma "Eradicate or commodit> tradition?" . The Loss of Customs: Absenee of a Common Discourse and Hermeneutical Differentiations /. "Old Men" versus "Young Innovators Men": Conservatives and Since the mid-1960s one subject has more or less monopolized communin interest in both ritual (poetic) and everyday discussions; namely, " t h e loss of customs 1 (To hasimo ton ethimon, as the Olymbians say). As mentioned earlier, traditional Olymbians, and especially the elderly, reprove the young for their heedless indifference to customs and conspicuous shamelessness. phenomena they regard as symptoms of the modern "in ternal \enitia (that is alienation) of the Olymbian community. The elders* criticism of the actions and views of the young is often an appropriate way of evaluating the young peoples families, according to neo-traditional criteria. To give an example, in the late 1980s a serious misunder standing arose between middle-aged and young men in Olymbos. In two of the coffee shops in the square a company of older men was sitting at one table and a company of young men at another. Though the older men were feasting with traditional discipline and order, the young men were listening to Greek popular songs, making a lot of noise. Commenting on this innovative breach of formality, one of the middle-aged meraklidhc* sang: Each in his own manner each according to his conduct reveals his family reveals his descent IH8 The singer upbraided the young men according to traditional criteria, holding their parents responsible for their inappropriate behaviour. The deeper meaning of this observation is thai for the singer and his companions the cause of the modern crisis in Olvmbos is not, as some believe, the generation gap, but the wickedness ul certain families. When arguing in general about the character and demeanour of the young, the critics ol ι heir conduct express implicitly their own opposition to the homogen izing ethos of modern society. For instance, the con servatives attack the parvenu innovators for their efforts to acquire the same social standing and esteem in the community as persons with a family tradition of moral rectitude. Sometimes the generalizations and uproven accusations recited by the "old"' against the " y o u n g " become the target of reaction on the part of the alleged culprits. To give an example, at the feast of Ai-Yannis in 1988, when the old men had censured the young for loss of customs. a young emigrant sang: //' the customs arc lost. the old will be to blame for when the fish rots, it rots from the head The young man s intervention was not taken up by either the elderly or the youngglendistes. The former were divided in their attitude to the young emigrant (some agreed with him. others disagreed), for which reason they avoided discussing the issue. On the other hand, the young men at the feast hesitated to compete with the "old men' in framing their arguments poetically, and so they too abandoned the issue of who is responsible for the loss of customs. //. Local•- versus Expatriates: "Authentic"and (xinoi) Olymbians "Foreign" I ensions existing between the permanent residents of Olymbos and the emigrants, regardless ol social rank, are always covertly expressed through the glendi. One such case concerns the traditional singers criticism of the presence of other (neo-traditional) singers at the glendi. Traditional sinuers become indignant when feasting inside the village hall, because of the lack of discipline: the men, women and especially the childern make so much noise they are unable to hear the mandinadhes of other singers in the compan> and, therefore, unable lo reply. The outcome of this, now typical, disorder is that iheglendia held inside the hall, though observing customary formal ities, are totally devoid of substantial content. At one such glendi in the 1980s, a mcrakus who is a permanent resident of Olymbos parodied the inane verbiage of some expatriate glendistes: You stand like columns in the middle of the hall Your mandinadhes are like a donkey's farts The contrast between the traditional and neo-traditional element is weakening, as the Olymbos community is being modernized. Labour relations between Olymbians and "foreigners" (that is persons from other regions of 1 Greece) give rise to new social connections and network ; of acquaintances. More specifically, in Karpathos Olymbians develop close relations with kaiohoriies, while in Rhodes and Piraeus they get to know and have dealings with people from all over Greece. Thus, when an Olymbian family celebrates a joyful event (a wedding or christening) today, it invites people from a diversity of cultural backgrounds. Strangers among strangers, without knowledge of the local mores, and often with a folkloric conception of "traditional" customs, the feux-pas of the "foreign" guests in the dance often spark misunderstand ings between traditionalist, neo-traditionalist and modern izing Olymbians. Any such friction is treated with tolerance by the organi/crs and with polite indifference b) the others. In each case, however, such events become the pretext for animated discussions behind the scenes of the ritual. I. et us look at an example. At a wedding glendi held in Rhodes in 1989 a professional band was hired to entertain the guests. Many of the Olymbians present were upset by the absence of (Carpathian instruments, but what irritated them most was the estranging and, consequently, insulting excuse given by the organizers when asked why. The hosts declared that they preferred the "cosmopoli tan" band to the Karpathian instruments because they considered the Olymbian dance tunes would be tiring for the "foreign" guests of honour. Vexed by the bourgeois type of entertainment, a com pany of young singers who live permanently on Rhodes took part in a peculiar glendi of their own: they scribbled mandinadhes on their napkins and passed them round to each other while still at the wedding table. This written glendi censured, on the one hand, the " m o d e r n " (that is bourgeois) tactics of the neo-Olymbians as "foreign" to Olymbian tradition and, on the other, stressed that today's Olymbians must unite as a community through ihe glendi in order to maintain their distinctive cultural identity within Greece. Summary and Conclusions: Cultural Change and Political Confrontations through the Dance The evolution of the dance at Olymbos reflects the dynamic relationship between culture and politics in this society. Reactions to the cultural change and political confrontations experienced by the Olymbian communtiy during the twentieth century have been clearly manifested through the dance. Kanaka/idhes and emigrants, locals and expatriates, traditionalists and neo-traditionalists have all used the dance as ι symbolic means (I) of maintaining or enhancing their family's reputation and standing in the community and (2) of expressing their common identity as Olymbians. Before World War II the relationship between culture and politics followed the logic of holistic symbolism, that is to say it was a relationship between the whole and the part. This may be ascertained from the fact that the political differentiation of the Olymbian com munity into kanakaridhes and emigrants was expressed through the common cultural "language ' o\ customs, and in particular through two important symbols of the traditional community: the dance and the glendi. That political differences were expressed through a common cultural language facilitates our understand of the logic w hereby the confrontations of kanakaridhe* and emigrants not only posed no threat to the unity ol the community, but actually strengthened it; a tangible demonstration of the supra-political character of traditional Olymbian culture. Furthermore, the holistic relationship between culture and politics in pre-Wai Olymbos constitutes the main reason for the incessant expression of political confrontations as hermeneutical differentiations (between the conservative kanakaridhes and the innovative emigrants) in relation to an indisputable cultural reality: the Olymbian community. Since Unification, Olymbians have experienced an unprecedented cultural crisis of estrangement from their traditional community. This crisis was instigated by the mass emigration of the 1950s and '60s and was crystallized during the period of modernization, the 1970s and "80s In seeking a causal relationship with which to explain the modern crisis in then society, elderly Olymbians have focused on the idea of expatriation, that is on the tradi tional symbolism of the cultural Elsewhere, and have accused the expatriate Olymbians of being responsible for the break up of the community and its estrangement from traditional customs The discourse of the elderly on the "loss of customs has split the community ethically. The Olymbians of the diaspora are divided into those who seek the revival of tradition (neo-traditionalists) and those who advocate ι hetotal abandonment of traditional customs (modernize! s ι Both these opposing tendencies are rejected by those who came of age in pre-War Olymbos (traditionalists), who maintain thai neither the return to the old way of life noi complete dissociation from the past are possible. The neo-traditionalists and modernizers have doubts about the unity of the Olymbian community in practice and, therefore, about the existence of a common discourse for the expression of cultural differences. In other words, the post-War relationship between culture and politics follows the logic ot the symbolism of parts: it is a relationship between parts without a transcendental (holistic) dimen sion. The outcome of this fact is that modern political differentiations do not unite the Olymbians culturally, as they did in the old days. On the contrary, the political confrontations stem from (and reproduce) contemporai ν cultural fragmentation, individualizing the problem o\ the crisis. I he lack ol a common cultural language has contrib uted to the partisanship of political adversaries who desist from airing their differences in public at a suprapolitical level. The division of the Olymbian community into two IK!) political factions in the 1980s led to the unprecedented refuse] of many Olymbians to participate in community events. During this decade many Olymbians systematically avoided going toglendia, or even attending church, with their political opponents. The disengagement of the dance from the μΐάιύϊ and its consequent commercialization are significant symptoms of contemporary cultural change in Olymbos. However, despite its modernization, the dance continues to constitute a common medium of expression for most Olymbians, who thus resist alienation from their traditional culture. In its present form the dance symbolizes the Olymbians' reaction to the xenitia of modernity w ith which Olymbos, like the whole traditional world, is threatened: cultural assimilation by the "mechanized super culture of the West Translation: ALEXANDRA DOUMAS Notes This article is based on ethnographic material gathered between 198ft and 1989 in field research on Karpalhos ami interviews wilh Olymbians now permanently settled in Rhodes, Piraeus, Baltimore and New York. • By iradiih'iiii! ndctj 1 mean a non-industrial Society, particularly a peasant one. For a definition of "tradition"' and "traditional" see below. I tic term dance as used here refers to traditional dance, that is the dances danced in [radihoii.il sock-ties, unless otherwise specified A On anthropological research on dance tec K;icpplcr (1978), Cowan (1990). 11 Loutzaki (1979-80. 1983-5). Raflis < IW^K Cowan (1990). On the concept of "social practice" sec Ortner (198-4). (in the concept of'hegemony' seeGramsci (1971), Williams (1977:110>. On Avlona's relation to Olymbos see Philippides (197V! IK). Philippides (I98?iin 9 Philippides (1973:23). 10 On ihertj.un/inad/ra at Olymbos see Caraveli (1985), Kavouras (1990). I) On the etymology and interpretation of Olymbian terms see Mihailidis-Nouaros (1972) and Ylinas (1970). On the aesthetic, economic and symbolic value of the kolaina at Olymbos see Nkiadha (1990). On the question of tradition see Maclntyre (1984:204-25). Kiourtsakis (1979). (1983:17-81). 13 Karagheorghi-Halkia (IVHIi. On Olymbian emigration see Philippides (1973), Vernier (1979). Karagheorghi-Halkia (1981). ' In i\\e glendi in the form of mandinadhes and in the laments or dirges of the womenfolk On the Olympian lament see Caraveli (1985, 1986). Kavouras (1990). 16 Dttbtsch (194 On the use of the concepts of noYjptOs and MOOS in Crete see Herzfeld (1985). 18 On the ( Hvruhian glendi see Caraveli (I9K5|. Kavouras (1990). 19,< >n the concept oi the ntcnklis in Olymboi sec Caraveli (1985:264 5) tnd Kavouias (1990:217-22. 286-94). On the relationship between \cnitia and death in Greek folk songs see U (1974). Da η forth (1982:90 115), Saunicr (1983:250-3), Kavouras (1990:100-36). * Olymbians say "a good glendi is measured by the tears" see Caraveli (1985:263). On the subject of observing the rules of the glendi see Caraseli 11985:263-4). Kavouras (1990:257-62). ** On kefi in relation to the glendi see Caraveli (1985:263 4i. Kavouras (1990:212-6). - 4 At unscheduled, spontaneous glendia the singing docs not invariably lead on to dancing. Olymbians show a more general aversion to the rembHiko subculture (ol which the dances ftasaprtos and /eimbekikos are intcg-.ι ports), which they regard as "Turkish", that is "foreign" to their tradition. On the Influence of the Oriental urban glendi on the traditional Greek glendi see Baud-Bovy (1984:55-70). On the distinction of traditional Greek song, music and dance as insular and mainland sec Baud-Bovy (1984:25-40). On the significance of personal identity in traditional society sec Since World War II this la ically, because gossip (tourer ro) has become the principal form of informal social control in Olymbos. Since tlie 1960s mothers have sent their daughters to dance alongside dose relatives, afraid ol ιΐκ- damaging effect of gossip on the moral standing of the girl and the family. On the relationship between economic and symbolic capital in Olymbos see Vernier (1979:62-3). For a critical discussion of Vernier see Kavouras (1990:368-74). Moreover, Vernier's (1979:65) information that there were two weekly dances (one for the poor and one for the rich) is incorrect: economic distinctions were not made regarding participation in the glendi and the dance. 31 Kavouras (1990:212-7 and in passiml. ( ar.n.li (1985). • ~ On the customary inheritance system of Kaipathos see Mih.i Nouaros (1984). Vernier (1979, 1985). Daskalopoulou-Kapctaiiaki (1987). In Olymbos organopaiktei (lie. instrument-players) are known as organs (lit. instruments) or paignia (lit. players). On the usage of the word organa instead of organopatkte* in another Greek community see Cowan (1990:101). Cowan's interpretation of the reduction of the musicians personality into mere 'instruments" for the dance requires further elaboration, especially with regard to I IK• symbolism of "the organa" in relation to the commercialization of the dance in Sohos. in traditional Olymbos. however. the term organo is used as a figure of speech, alluding synecdochically to the specific person playing the indigenous musical instrument 3 On the social organization of Olymbos see Philippides (1973) and Vernier [1979, 1985). The sole exception, which proses the rule, was an incident known to elderly Olymbians as the "revolt of the pews". In 1922 a group of emigrants broke the pews in the central church in Olymbos. Given that the pews belonged only to kanakiridiM (Ins act was regarded by the community as an open attack on the social establishment in Olymbos. On the "revolt of the pews" see Konsolas (1964:244-50) The Olymbians call those Karpathians whose villages lie to the south of Olymbos katohoritcs. This localist distinction is traditionally associated with a culmta! evaluation: the pano/ron re* (the northerners, i.e. theOKinhi.uis) consider themselves superior to the katohorites (the southerners) 17 According to the testimonies of elderly Olymbians the musicians who played at glendia in southern Karpathos have received cash payments since the 1880s. On the usage of money in the Karpathiarii/eridj during the second half of the nineteenth century see Halkias (1980:98-103). 38 Fournisma means praise, see Mihailidis-Nouaros (1972:442) On the period of starvation and the total black market see Mihailidts Nouaros (1951:15-8). 4 0 Philippides (1973:36-9). On Ihe hegemonic localism ol the kanakaridhei sec Kavouras (1990: 396-411). 47 During the 1980s there was an average of ten weddings ea; " ' ι Ι •1ι poet is the voice of the primitive community, and the primitive voice of the modern community.. see Diamond (1986:132). 4 4 Anoyannakis (1976). Baud-Bovy (1984) and I iavas (1983-5). O n • comparative presentation of the evolution of the Cretan and Karpathian \yra see t.iavas (1983-5). 46 On the subject of individual requests for tunes and dances parangclies in the lireek town of Sohos see Cowan (1990:89-133, 171-87). Maclntyre (1984:33-5). u On 190 the Olymbos As, for example, a variation of the hasapikos marriage market" see Vernier(1979). 48 The expression is from Seferis (1974:356). known as synaki.