Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Map
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: witness to genocide
- Part 1 The framework
- 1 Twentieth-century genocides
- 2 Under cover of war: the Armenian Genocide in the context of total war
- 3 The Armenian Genocide: an interpretation
- Part II During the Catastrophe
- Part III After the Catastrophe
- Index
- Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare
2 - Under cover of war: the Armenian Genocide in the context of total war
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Map
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: witness to genocide
- Part 1 The framework
- 1 Twentieth-century genocides
- 2 Under cover of war: the Armenian Genocide in the context of total war
- 3 The Armenian Genocide: an interpretation
- Part II During the Catastrophe
- Part III After the Catastrophe
- Index
- Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare
Summary
It is one of the signal challenges of the historical profession to provide a guide to understanding the century which has just passed while recognizing that the language historians use is in significant ways inadequate to the task. In that historical narrative, to talk of genocide is unavoidable, but the grammar of historical analysis withers when used to encapsulate the history of genocide.
Some have called this problem a crisis of representation, formulated famously by Adorno in the rhetorical statement that, after Auschwitz there can be no poetry. His injunction was to try to write poetry nonetheless. It may be useful to recast Adorno and to say that, after Auschwitz, there can be no linear history, and yet we must try to write it nonetheless. This insight was true long before Auschwitz, however, and the need to recognize it and reflect on it was evident well before the Second World War.
Here is the predicament we face. Dietrich Bonhoeffer wrote that only those who cried for the Jews had the right to sing Gregorian chants. I want to suggest that only by confronting the horror of the Armenian genocide of 1915 can we begin to locate the Holocaust of the Second World War within the history of the twentieth century. For these crimes occurred under the cover of world wars; and both disclosed the devastating logic and power of a new kind of war: “total war”.
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- Information
- America and the Armenian Genocide of 1915 , pp. 37 - 51Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004
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