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Great Catastrophe - Armenians and Turks in the Shadow of Genocide (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R599
Discovery Miles 5 990
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Great Catastrophe - Armenians and Turks in the Shadow of Genocide (Hardcover)
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Loot Price R599
Discovery Miles 5 990
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The destruction of the Armenians of the Ottoman Empire in 1915-16
was a brutal mass crime that prefigured other genocides in the 20th
century. By various estimates, more than a million Armenians were
killed and the survivors were scattered across the world. Although
it is now a century old, the issue of what most of the world calls
the Armenian Genocide of 1915 has not been consigned to history. It
is a live and divisive political issue that mobilizes Armenians
across the world, touches the identity and politics of modern
Turkey, and has consumed the attention of U.S. politicians for
years.
In Great Catastrophe, the eminent scholar and reporter Thomas de
Waal looks at the changing narratives and politics of the Armenian
Genocide and tells the story of recent efforts by courageous
Armenians, Kurds, and Turks to come to terms with the disaster as
Turkey enters a new post-Kemalist era. The story of what happened
to the Armenians in 1915-16 is well-known. Here we are told the
much less well-known story of what happened to Armenians, Kurds,
and Turks in its aftermath. First Armenians were divided between
the Soviet Union and a worldwide diaspora, with different
generations and communities of Armenians constructing new
identities, while bitter intra-Armenian quarrels sometimes broke
out into violence. In Turkey, the Armenian issue was initially
forgotten and suppressed, only to return to the political agenda in
the context of the Cold War, an outbreak of Armenian terrorism in
the 1970s and the growth of modern "identity politics" in the age
of genocide-consciousness. In the last decade, Turkey has begun to
confront its taboos and finally face up to the Armenian issue. New,
more sophisticated histories are being written of the deportations
of 1915, now with the collaboration of Turkish scholars. In Turkey
itself there has been an astonishing revival of oral history, with
tens of thousands of people coming out of the shadows to reveal a
long-suppressed Armenian identity. However, a normalization process
between the Armenian and Turkish states broke down in 2010.
Drawing on archival sources, reportage and moving personal stories,
de Waal tells the full story of Armenian-Turkish relations since
the Genocide in all its extraordinary twists and turns. He strips
away the propaganda to look both at the realities of a terrible
historical crime and also the divisive "politics of genocide" it
produced. The book throws light not only on our understanding of
Armenian-Turkish relations but also of how mass atrocities and
historical tragedies shape contemporary politics.
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