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U.Mich Ann Arbor: Dr Laycock Discusses Contradictions in Brit Policy

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  • U.Mich Ann Arbor: Dr Laycock Discusses Contradictions in Brit Policy

    PRESS RELEASE

    For further information, please contact:
    Gloria Caudill, Administrator
    Armenian Studies Program
    University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
    [email protected]
    (734) 763-0622


    DR. LAYCOCK DISCUSSES CONTRADICTIONS IN BRITISH POLICY TOWARD ARMENIA
    AND ARMENIANS


    Dr. Joanne Laycock, historian who has studied British responses to
    Armenian issues during the late 19th and early 20th centuries,
    presented two public lectures in early April to present her findings.

    Dr. Laycock is Manoogian Simone Foundation Post-doctoral Fellow at the
    Armenian Studies Program, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.

    On April 3, Dr. Laycock discussed British responses to the Armenian
    Refugee Crisis, 1918-1925 at the International Institute of the
    University of Michigan. Her second lecture, "British Encounters with
    Armenia in the 19th Century," co-sponsored by the Armenian Research
    Center, University of Michigan-Dearborn, was presented on April 7 in
    Southfield, Michigan, in the lecture hall of St. John Armenian Church.

    In both lectures Dr. Laycock unraveled the contradictory nature of
    British attitudes toward Armenia and Armenia during times when the
    British Empire was a dominating world power and when critical events
    were happening in Armenian history.

    Discussing the early period of contact with Armenians, the British on
    the one hand recognized Armenians as a fellow Christian people, "last
    bastions of the Christian faith" in the region, and appreciated the
    ruins of Ani and other architectural sites; and, on the other hand,
    they characterized Armenians in the provinces as "primitive," and the
    Armenian Church as "superstitious and backward." For the British,
    Armenia may be timeless but "civilization had moved West," and there
    had been no progress or change in the land. "Eastern invasions had
    subdued the Armenians and turned them into a slavish people."
    Nonetheless, argued Dr. Laycock, a strong pro-Armenian movement
    developed, a movement that tried to reconcile these contradictory
    perceptions into a policy that might help Armenians in the Ottoman
    Empire.

    The theme of contradictory attitudes was also the subject of
    Dr. Laycock's lecture on the refugee crisis. During the First World
    War, she argued, the slaughter of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire was
    a major topic for the government and people of the British Empire,
    especially considering the reservoir of sympathy from earlier
    periods. But these tragic events were also used by the British
    Government as a propaganda tool against the German-Austrian-Ottoman
    alliance. When the war ended the British, controlling Iraq,
    established orphanages. Dr. Laycock displayed wrenching photos of
    Armenian refugee camps in Basra, Baquba and Mosul not seen publicly
    before (courtesy of the Nubarian Library in Paris).

    Yet, argued the lecturer, earlier characterizations of Armenians
    returned when the caretakers of the orphanages looked upon the orphans
    as a problem, "half-civilized" and when "Armenians" became "a problem
    of their own," "oriental," "Eastern."

    Both lectures were followed by a lively period of comments and of
    questions and answers. In response to a critic in the audience who
    considered British policies duplicitous,  Dr. Laycock answered, "I
    cannot begin to apologize for these policies," although she clearly
    was not responsible for them personally.

    In addition to covering the British Armenophile movement and response
    to the Armenian Genocide, the Armenian refugee relief post WWI, and
    British travel writing on Armenia, Dr. Laycock is currently working on
    Soviet Armenian history, especially with regards to the repatriation
    to Armenia and homeland-Diaspora relations.

    Dr. Joanne Laycock received her doctorate in history from Manchester
    University in 2005 and has, since then, published a number of
    important studies in collected essays. As a Post-doctoral Fellow at
    the Armenian Studies Program at the University of Michigan,
    Dr. Laycock is working on new studies in her area of specialization.

    Her book on Britain and Armenia Imagining Armenia: Orientalism,
    Ambiguity and Intervention, will be published by MUP this autumn.
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