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Forgotten Genocides: Oblivion, Denial, and Memory

✍ Scribed by René Lemarchand


Publisher
University of Pennsylvania Press
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Leaves
201
Series
Pennsylvania Studies in Human Rights
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Unlike the Holocaust, Rwanda, Cambodia, or Armenia, scant attention has been paid to the human tragedies analyzed in this book. From German Southwest Africa (now Namibia), Burundi, and eastern Congo to Tasmania, Tibet, and Kurdistan, from the mass killings of the Roms by the Nazis to the extermination of the Assyrians in Ottoman Turkey, the mind reels when confronted with the inhuman acts that have been consigned to oblivion.

Forgotten Genocides: Oblivion, Denial, and Memory gathers eight essays about genocidal conflicts that are unremembered and, as a consequence, understudied. The contributors, scholars in political science, anthropology, history, and other fields, seek to restore these mass killings to the place they deserve in the public consciousness. Remembrance of long forgotten crimes is not the volume's only purpose--equally significant are the rich quarry of empirical data offered in each chapter, the theoretical insights provided, and the comparative perspectives suggested for the analysis of genocidal phenomena. While each genocide is unique in its circumstances and motives, the essays in this volume explain that deliberate concealment and manipulation of the facts by the perpetrators are more often the rule than the exception, and that memory often tends to distort the past and blame the victims while exonerating the killers.

Although the cases discussed here are but a sample of a litany going back to biblical times, Forgotten Genocides offers an important examination of the diversity of contexts out of which repeatedly emerge the same hideous realities.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Forgotten Genocides
Title
Copyright
Contents
Preface
Introduction
1 Mass Murder in Eastern Congo, 1996–1997
2 Burundi 1972: Genocide Denied, Revised, and Remembered
3 β€˜β€˜Every Herero Will Be Shot’’: Genocide, Concentration Camps, and Slave Labor in German South-West Africa
4 Extermination, Extinction, Genocide: British Colonialism and Tasmanian Aborigines
5 Tibet: A Neo-Colonial Genocide
6 The Anfal Campaign Against the Kurds: Chemical Weapons in the Service of Mass Murder
7 The Assyrian Genocide: A Tale of Oblivion and Denial
8 The β€˜β€˜Gypsy Problem’’: An Invisible Genocide
Notes
List of Contributors
Index


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