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Book Talk: America's Wards: Orphan Survivors Of The Armenian Genocid

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  • Book Talk: America's Wards: Orphan Survivors Of The Armenian Genocid

    "AMERICA'S WARDS: ORPHAN SURVIVORS OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE AND THE ORIGINS OF AMERICAN HUMANITARIAN EXCEPTIONALISM (1920-1925)"
    Keith David Watenpaugh: Associate Professor, Religious Studies University of California, Davis

    Eleanor Roosevelt College (ERC)
    Room 115, UC San Diego
    Thursday, January 14, 2010

    To register, email [email protected]

    Drawn from his forthcoming work, "Bread from Stones: The Middle
    East and the Making of Modern Humanitarianism," this talk traces the
    emergence of a self-defined exceptional American role in assisting
    the peoples of the post-WWI Middle East by focusing on the work of
    Near East Relief on behalf of Armenian Genocide survivor orphans. This
    role was built upon the assertion of the non-colonialist and altruistic
    nature of the American involvement in the Middle East and a belief in
    the unique ability of Americans to transfer Progressive Era reform to
    that region. Not only did American Humanitarian Exceptionalism shape
    the specific modes and characteristics of relief projects at the
    time, but also influenced broader attitudes and ideas about Middle
    Eastern peoples and Islam in the United States, and in the Middle
    East the multiple perceptions of America, Americans and its programs
    for assistance and development. Likewise, the persisting reach of this
    exceptionalism affected the future direction of American relief in the
    region and continues to influence decisions about aid and intervention.

    Keith David Watenpaugh is Associate Professor of Modern Islam,
    Human Rights and Peace at the University of California, Davis. He
    is author of Being Modern in the Middle East (Princeton, 2006), and
    most recently was a Jennings Randolph Senior Fellow in International
    Peace at the U.S. Institute for Peace. His work has appeared or will
    appear in the American Historical Review, the International Journal
    of Middle East Studies, and Social History, and has been translated
    into Arabic, Persian, German and French. He currently serves on the
    editorial board of the International Journal of Middle East Studies.
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