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Preface; References; Acknowledgements; Book Outline; Contents; Chapter 1: Introduction: Nationalism and Political Representation in Colonised Countries; 1.1 Greek and Greek Cypriot Nationalism; 1.2 Colonial Narratives of Party Politics; 1.3 Cleavage Lines and Greek Intra-Ethnic Politics; 1.3.1 A New Hegemonic Bloc and Internal Antitheses; 1.4 Framework of Analysis: From Outsiders to Insiders and Back Again; References; Chapter 2: The New Social Terrain of (Nationalist) Party Politics; 2.1 The End of Ottoman Occupation; 2.1.1 Social Relations and the Socio-Political Elite

2.2 The British Colonial Era2.3 Economic Reforms; 2.4 A Society in Change; 2.4.1 The Cypriot Bourgeoisie to the Fore; 2.4.2 A New Elite; 2.5 Social Relations and Sources of Clientele Relations; References; Censuses; Cyprus Blue Books; Chapter 3: Institutional Engineering and Political Change; 3.1 The Legislative Council: A Quasi-Parliament; 3.2 Voting Reform; 3.3 Citizen Participation in Elections; 3.3.1 Political Exclusionism; 3.4 The Iron Law of Oligarchy: Elite Politics; 3.5 Patronage Politics; 3.6 The (Colonial) Limitations of (Nationalist) Party Politics; 3.6.1 Compromised Democracy

3.6.2 Electoral Process as a Lightning RodReferences; Censuses; Cyprus Blue Books; Chapter 4: The Reconstruction of the Public Sphere: The Hegemony of Nationalism; 4.1 Agents of Nationalism and the Demand for Enosis; 4.2 The Nature and Singularities of the National Movement in Cyprus; 4.3 The Popular Nature of the National Movement: An Artificial Construct?; 4.4 Mechanisms of Transmission of the Nationalist Ideology; 4.4.1 Education; 4.4.2 Printed Media; 4.4.3 The Balkan Wars; 4.5 Ideas as Carriers of Change; References; Censuses; Cyprus Blue Books

Chapter 5: Modernisation and the Church as an Institution of Continuity5.1 The Cypriot Church in History; 5.2 The Conflict Between the British and the Church; 5.3 Church Endorsement of Nationalism; References; Cyprus Blue Books; Chapter 6: The Crisis of Established Politics and the Emergence of the Nationalist Right; 6.1 The Archiepiscopal Question: A Rupture with the Past; 6.2 The Opposing Camps; 6.3 The Ideological Character of the Conflict; 6.4 The Battlefields (1): The Press; 6.4.1 The Battlefields (2): Organisation; 6.5 The Beginning of Mass Politics and the Nationalisation of Politics

6.6 An Evaluation6.7 The Cypriot Church After the Archiepiscopal Rift; References; Chapter 7: Politicising Nationalism and Anti-Colonialism: The Nationalist Milieu; 7.1 Clubs, Reading Rooms and Associations; 7.2 The Organising Pillars: The Freemasons and the Press; 7.3 Island-Wide Political Structures; 7.3.1 Cyprus Political Organisation (1912); 7.3.2 The Political Organisation of Cyprus (1921); 7.4 The Reformist Turn; 7.4.1 The Popular Party; 7.5 The Revival of the Nationalists; 7.5.1 The National Organisation (1930); 7.6 Emergence of the Radical Right (EREK 1931)

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