Memoria Mundi

A personal research library

Memoria Mundi

A library that answers back.

Books are read once and remembered forever. Ask a question, follow an argument — every answer arrives with its sources: book, author, page.

From the shelves

Nations and Nationalism — Ernest GellnerThe Greek Revolution: A Critical DictionaryDream Nation — Stathis GourgourisOurs Once More — Michael HerzfeldThat Greece Might Still Be Free — William St ClairByron's War — Roderick BeatonThe Nation and Its Ruins — Yannis HamilakisThe Making of Modern Greece

A working collection — read, indexed, and cited by page.

The Method

I.

Read

Every book in the collection is read page by page — histories, monographs, critical dictionaries. The original pagination survives, so every passage keeps its address: book, author, page.

II.

Cite

Claims are never left standing on their own. Each one is pinned to verbatim passages from the shelves, quoted exactly as printed and addressed down to the page they came from.

…nationalism is not the awakening of nations to self-consciousness: it invents nations where they do not exist…

Ernest Gellner, Thought and Change, p. 169 verbatim
III.

Ask

Curated questions and answers live alongside the books. Every claim is pinned to its sources: author, credentials, work, and pages — never an answer without a citation.

Was the modern Greek state a revival of ancient Hellas?

Sources

  • Michael Herzfeld (Professor of Anthropology, Harvard), Ours Once More, pp. 3–23
  • Stathis Gourgouris, Dream Nation, pp. 71–99
IV.

Publish

The evidence becomes essays and carousel posts — verbatim quotes, set on classical backdrops, with the citation on the slide. The argument travels with its sources attached.

Flagship collection

Debunking modern Greek nationalism

Two dozen scholarly works — histories of the 1821 revolution, studies of folklore and ideology, the invention of national literatures — read page by page and indexed down to the paragraph. When a myth circulates, the library answers with what the historians actually wrote, and the page they wrote it on.

Browse the collection →

On nations & forgetting

“Forgetting, I would even say historical error, is an essential factor in the creation of a nation.”
— Ernest Renan, Qu'est-ce qu'une nation? (1882)

Every answer carries its sources.

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