Lilia Diamantopoulou

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Lilia Diamantopoulou ( Greek Λίλια Διαμαντοπούλου ; * 1981 in Munich ) is a Greek neo- Grecist .

Life

From 1999 to 2006 she studied general and comparative literature ( comparative literature ), neo-Greek and early Christian and Byzantine art history at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich . From September 2002 to February 2003 she was studying at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki as part of the Erasmus program . From February 2003 to July 2003 she was studying at the University of Bologna . From December 2005 to February 2006 she obtained a Magister Artium (MA) degree in General and Comparative Literature / Comparative Literature, Neo-Greek Studies and Early Christian and Byzantine Art History. The topic of the master's thesis was: The Byzantine figure poems in comparison with the figure poems of the German Baroque . She was university assistant at the Institute for Byzantine and Neo-Greek Studies at the University of Vienna (2012–2018). After receiving his doctorate in February 2013 as Dr. phil. in Modern Greek Studies and General and Comparative Literature / Comparative Literature summa cum laude ( dissertation : The Greek-speaking visual poetry from ancient times to the present day (reviewers: Marilisa Mitsou , Miltos Pechlivanos , Martin von Koppenfels )) teaches as since 2019 Professor of Modern Greek Studies at the Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich.

Her main areas of work are fake news and forgeries, "deceived science" ( Konstantinos Simonides ), forms of translation and adaptations (focus: comics), virtual reality in neo-Greek studies, visual and concrete poetry and the visualization of knowledge in tables , maps and infograms and charts . A current work is dedicated to Carl Jakob Iken , who is considered a pioneer in neo-Greek studies.

Fonts (selection)

  • Greek visual poetry. From antiquity to the present . Frankfurt am Main 2016, ISBN 978-3-631-67423-9 .
  • as editor with Andreas E. Müller , Christianwirt and Athanasia Katsiakiori-Rankl: The Deceived Science. A genius betrays Europe - Konstantinos Simonides . Göttingen 2017, ISBN 3-8471-0714-3 .
  • as editor with Maria Gerolemou: Mirrors and Mirroring from Antiquity to the Early Modern Period . London 2020, ISBN 9781350101289 .
  • Carl Jakob Iken and his pioneering role in neo-Greek studies . Berlin 2020, ISBN 311060082X .

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