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Genocide Studies International New Issue Dedicated To Centenary Of T

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  • Genocide Studies International New Issue Dedicated To Centenary Of T

    GENOCIDE STUDIES INTERNATIONAL NEW ISSUE DEDICATED TO CENTENARY OF THE ARMENIAN, ASSYRIAN AND GREEK GENOCIDES

    By MassisPost
    Updated: April 8, 2015

    TORONTO -- The International Institute for Genocide and Human Rights
    Studies (A Division of the Zoryan Institute) is pleased to announce
    the release of Genocide Studies International Volume 9, number 1,
    Spring 2015. The new issue is dedicated to the Ottoman Genocides of
    the Armenian, Assyrian, and Greek peoples, marking the upcoming 100th
    anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in April 2015.

    This peer-reviewed journal was edited by Roger W. Smith. The new
    issue includes six articles:

    - "Introduction: Ottoman Genocides of Armenians, Assyrians, and
    Greeks," by Roger W. Smith

    - "Contending Interpretations Concerning the Armenian Genocide:
    Continuity and Conspiracy, Discontinuity and Cumulative
    Radicalization," by Robert Melson

    - "The Genocide against the Ottoman Armenians: German Diplomatic
    Correspondence and Eyewitness Testimonies," by Tessa Hofmann

    - "Academic Denial of the Armenian Genocide in American Scholarship:
    Denialism as Manufactured Controversy," by Marc. A. Mamigonian

    - "The Complexity of the Assyrian Genocide," by David Gaunt

    - "The Genocide of the Greeks of the Ottoman Empire, 1913-1923:
    A Comprehensive Overview," by Vasileios Th. Meichanetsidis.

    Prof. Smith's article introduces the themes addressed in this special
    issue of GSI and emphasizes how careful consideration of the Ottoman
    genocides deepens our understanding of what genocide is and how it
    can be enacted.

    Prof. Melson's article examines the relationship between the
    Armenian massacres of 1894-1896 and on the process that initiated
    the Genocide during and following WWI. One group of historians argue
    that the Genocide was a continuation of the 1894-1896 massacres and
    that its origins were rooted in Islam and Ottoman culture, whereas a
    second group of scholars contend that the Genocide was qualitatively
    different from the massacres and that it was driven by a policy of
    radicalization during WWI. The article concludes with an evaluation
    of some of the assumptions of the second view.

    Hofmann's article documents and analyses the genocide of the 1.5
    million Armenians in the Ottoman Empire during 1915 and 1916 and is
    based mainly on the German diplomatic correspondence of the time,
    which is preserved at the Political Archives of the German Foreign
    Office, in Berlin. A special subsection of the article is dedicated
    to the clandestine intelligence organization, TeÅ~_kilat-ı Mahsusa
    (Special Organization), which planned, implemented and largely
    conducted the destruction of the Armenians. Germany's involvement in
    the destruction of Ottoman Armenians, Aramaic-speaking Christians,
    and Greek-Orthodox Christians is also examined.

    Mamigonian's article traces the early development of Armenian Genocide
    denial and focuses on the more recent refinements and the penetration
    of denial into mainstream American academia, posing as a legitimate
    intellectual position within a historical debate.

    Prof. Gaunt's article focuses on another group targeted by the Ottoman
    Empire for extermination: the Assyrians. The Assyrian Genocide involved
    many non-Armenian Christian groups native to eastern Anatolia and
    northern Mesopotamia. Among them were the Assyrian Church of the East,
    the Chaldean Church, the Syriac Orthodox, and some smaller sects.

    Meichanetsidis' article refers to the 1913-1923 Genocide of the
    Greeks of the Ottoman Empire and provides a comprehensive overview
    of the overall genocidal process. The article aims at providing an
    understanding of the Genocide and a sense of the Ottoman projects of
    destruction that included Armenians, Assyrians/Arameans and Greeks in
    an attempt at a total restricting of Ottoman society and the creation
    of a Turkish Muslim national state.

    Also included is a book review: The Young Turks' Crime against
    Humanity: The Armenian Genocide and Ethnic Cleansing in the Ottoman
    Empire by Taner AkÒ"am, reviewed by Dr. Rouben Paul Adalian, Director
    of the Armenian National Institute.

    For information on subscribing to the journal,
    or to purchase single copies, please visit
    http://www.utpjournals.com/Genocide-Studies-International.html
    or contact the International Institute for Genocide and
    Human Rights Studies (A Division of the Zoryan Institute) at
    [email protected] or by telephone 416-250-9807.

    http://massispost.com/2015/04/genocide-studies-international-new-issue-dedicated-to-centenary-of-the-armenian-assyrian-and-greek-genocides/

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