Broadcasting Greek Modernism explores the interrelations between Greek modernist writers and radio broadcasting in the period roughly between the late 1930s, when the Greek state radio was founded, and the mid-1960s, when the advent of television in Greece displaced radio as the primary form of domestic entertainment. The purpose of this workshop is to provide the basis for discussion of radio as an integral part of the history of Greek literary modernism, addressing a range topics, such as the radio work of canonical modernists, the transnational literary networks formed behind the microphone, and the importance of radio as a site of creative experimentation.