Alterum Byzantium

Series | Alterum Byzantium
Review | Byzantium and Its Neighbours
Chapter | Hate Speech, Ethnoreligious Prejudices, and Stereotypes in Byzantine Literature

Hate Speech, Ethnoreligious Prejudices, and Stereotypes in Byzantine Literature

Outline of an Ongoing Research Project

Abstract

In this article, the Author presents the theoretical framework for the research project “LiDoBIPH: A Linguistic Dossier of Byzantine Interreligious and Interconfessional Prejudice and Hatred”. The project examines Greek derogatory verbs and epithets used by Byzantine writers to describe Muslims and Latins. It focuses on terms found in Byzantine literature from the seventh to the mid-fourteenth century (anti-Islamic) and from the ninth to the early thirteenth century (anti-Latin). The framework includes an overview of the historiographical debate on identity and alterity in Byzantine studies and evaluates the concept of hate speech and its socio-psychological implications. It also proposes a distinction between literary invective and hate speech in Byzantine texts. Furthermore, the article discusses related studies, the adopted methodology, and the criteria for selecting the literary corpus, highlighting the project’s potential contribution to Byzantine studies.


Open access

Submitted: June 14, 2024 | Accepted: July 4, 2024 | Published Forthcoming | Language: en

Keywords Ethnic and religious stereotypesAlterityHate speechGreek languageByzantine literatureInterdisciplinarityLatinsMuslimsMethodologyDerogatory labelsCollective identityTheoryInvective