Image for America and the Armenian genocide of 1915

America and the Armenian genocide of 1915

Winter, Jay(Edited by)
Part of the Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare series
See all formats and editions

Before Rwanda and Bosnia, and before the Holocaust, the first genocide of the twentieth century happened in Turkish Armenia in 1915, when approximately one million people were killed.

This volume is an account of the American response to this atrocity.

The first part sets up the framework for understanding the genocide: Sir Martin Gilbert, Vahakn Dadrian and Jay Winter provide an analytical setting for nine scholarly essays examining how Americans learned of this catastrophe and how they tried to help its victims.

Knowledge and compassion, though, were not enough to stop the killings.

A terrible precedent was born in 1915, one which has come to haunt the United States and other Western countries throughout the twentieth century and beyond.

To read the essays in this volume is chastening: the dilemmas Americans faced when confronting evil on an unprecedented scale are not very different from the dilemmas we face today.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£110.00
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1107147875 / 9781107147874
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
08/01/2004
England
English
309 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%