TY - JOUR TI - 'Peasantist nationalism' in inter-war Greece (1927-41) AU - Ploumidis, S. JO - Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies PY - 2013 VL - 37 TODO - 1 SP - 111-129 PB - SN - 0307-0131, 1749-625X TODO - 10.1179/0307013112Z.00000000022 TODO - null TODO - 'Peasantist nationalism' was a new radical nationalist discourse in the twentieth century. The crisis in agriculture in the 1920s, urbanism and the perceived overpopulation of the cities were important social factors that instigated the intellectual construction of the 'peasantist nation'. Peasantist nationalism was by and large constructed by agronomists, a new stratum of technocrats who used nationalism as a vehicle for social mobility and their entry into the strata of the organic intellectuals of the bourgeoisie. Peasantist nationalist ideas, set forth earlier by the agronomists, were adopted by Metaxas' quasi-fascist regime and upgraded to the level of the state's hegemonic ideology. © 2013 Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman and Modern Greek Studies, University of Birmingham. ER -