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Book Review: The Historiographic Perversion By Marc Nichanian

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  • Book Review: The Historiographic Perversion By Marc Nichanian

    THE HISTORIOGRAPHIC PERVERSION

    The Times Higher Education Supplement
    November 26, 2009

    BYLINE: Piotr A. Cieplak
    SECTION: BOOKS; Pg. 50 No. 1924

    The Historiographic Perversion. By Marc Nichanian. Translated by Gil
    Anidjar. Columbia University Press. 216pp, £ 20.50 ISBN 9780231149082
    Published 20 October 2009

    While the mass killings of the Armenians in 1915, which claimed more
    than 1 million lives, have been recognised as a genocide by many
    historians and more than 20 governments around the world, there is
    still a great deal of controversy surrounding the nature of the event,
    the terminology that should be used to discuss it, and issues of guilt
    and responsibility. Turkey's refusal to recognise and acknowledge the
    Ottoman Empire's genocidal will and the fact that the term "genocide"
    implies not only victims but clearly defined perpetrators, means that
    debates on the event have been influenced by a variety of national
    and global political interests.

    Marc Nichanian's The Historiographic Perversion is not a
    straightforward polemic about the nature of The Catastrophe, as the
    Armenian genocide is often referred to. Instead, the book looks at
    the tragedy in the context of more fundamental issues about the use
    and significance of historical evidence as well as raising questions
    about what constitutes historical reality and what is a historical,
    or indeed any other, fact.

    Nichanian takes the widely publicised controversy in France about
    the Armenian genocide as his starting point. In 1994, Bernard Lewis,
    a renowned American historian, appeared before a French civil court
    accused of denying the genocide. Nichanian writes: "In short, a state
    court was asking a historian to give an account of his conception of
    truth in history. What a scandal!" The second event that Nichanian
    considers in conjunction with the trial is the case of another
    historian, Gilles Veinstein, whose election to the College de France
    was marred by accusations of negationism in relation to the articles
    he had written in Lewis' defence.

    Nichanian's analysis of the trial, the controversy and their impact
    on the public and intellectual circles is, however, only a part of
    a much wider inquiry. The premise of The Historiographic Perversion
    revolves around the aforementioned question of what constitutes a
    historical fact and who should have the final say in determining its
    veracity; a historian or a court of law, or perhaps neither? Nichanian
    writes that the cases of Lewis and Veinstein "made it possible for
    me to understand that an event could fail to be a fact and that new
    categories were necessary in order to think (of) the 'genocides'
    of the 20th century together with the unsettling events that have
    accompanied and followed them".

    Those accompanying and following events are of special interest in The
    Historiographic Perversion. Reaching beyond issues of negationism or
    responsibility, Nichanian provides a perceptive and complex exploration
    of the significance of the archive, especially the destruction of the
    archive as an integral part of the genocidal will, and the role and
    place of testimony in the legal, historical and cultural evidential
    framework that defines an event, historical and otherwise.

    The Historiographic Perversion is impressively well informed and
    engaged theoretically. Translated by Gil Anidjar, it is an extremely
    competent, eloquent and beautifully written work. Sometimes the
    theoretical complexity of the argument becomes confusing, but it
    never prevents the author's message from getting through. A powerful
    and personal book, it displays, through its evocative brilliance and
    discipline of logic, Nichanian's long-lasting engagement with the
    significance and context of the Armenian genocide.

    Piotr A. Cieplak is a doctoral researcher in the department of French,
    University of Cambridge.
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