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Journal articles on the topic 'Genocide – Historiography'

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1

MOSES, A. DIRK. "PARANOIA AND PARTISANSHIP: GENOCIDE STUDIES, HOLOCAUST HISTORIOGRAPHY, AND THE ‘APOCALYPTIC CONJUNCTURE’." Historical Journal 54, no. 2 (2011): 553–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x11000124.

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ABSTRACTRecent literature on the Holocaust and (other) genocides reveals that on the whole differences in approach persist. For many historians, as for the public, the Holocaust is the prototypical genocide, such that mass violence must resemble the Holocaust to constitute genocide. Whereas ‘normal’ ethnic/national conflict is commonly believed to involve ‘real’ issues like land, resources, and political power, no such conflict is discernible in the Holocaust of European Jewry, whose victims were passive and agentless objects of the ‘hallucinatory’ ideology of the perpetrators. But is this dis
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Yurchenko, Ivan. "The Issue of Decossackization in Modern Historiography: History of Studying, Legal and Political Aspects, Bibliography and Statistics of Publications." Vestnik Volgogradskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta. Serija 4. Istorija. Regionovedenie. Mezhdunarodnye otnoshenija, no. 4 (September 2019): 224–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.15688/jvolsu4.2019.4.19.

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Introduction. Decossackization is a complex issue of modern historiography of the Cossacks. The scientific relevance of the decossackization issue is caused by shortage of generalizing studies. The social and political relevance is connected with the Cossack Renaissance in modern Russia. It is possible to see a major boundary in decossackization, which divided traditional and modern history of the Cossacks. Methods. The author uses the method of analytical historiography, complex, structural and comparative analysis of historiographic sources, quantitative analysis of the nomenclature of studi
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3

NAIMARK, NORMAN M. "Applebaum, Fitzpatrick and the Genocide Question." Contemporary European History 27, no. 3 (2018): 435–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0960777318000292.

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Both Sheila Fitzpatrick and Anne Applebaum are fine historians who have made important contributions to the historiography of the Soviet Union. Applebaum works as a journalist and writer. But that is no reason to sniff at her contributions as ‘popular history’ or ‘history light’. In the books I have read, Gulag: A History (2003), Iron Curtain (2012) and Red Famine (2017), she has always strived to document her assertions, present logical and well-honed arguments and use archival and other documentary material where possible to forge new paths. One might not always agree with her conclusions, b
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Samuelson, Lennart. "On the «genocide» concept in contemporary Western historiography." Rossiiskaia istoriia, no. 3 (2019): 132–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.31857/s086956870005142-7.

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Stone, Dan. "The historiography of genocide: beyond ‘uniqueness’ and ethnic competition." Rethinking History 8, no. 1 (2004): 127–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13642520410001649769.

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Taylor, Rebe. "Genocide, Extinction and Aboriginal Self-determination in Tasmanian Historiography." History Compass 11, no. 6 (2013): 405–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hic3.12062.

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Madley, Benjamin. "Reexamining the American Genocide Debate: Meaning, Historiography, and New Methods." American Historical Review 120, no. 1 (2015): 98–139. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ahr/120.1.98.

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8

Lucchesi, Annita. "-hóhta’hané: Mapping Genocide & Restorative Justice in Native America." Proceedings of the ICA 1 (May 16, 2018): 1–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/ica-proc-1-71-2018.

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This thesis explores critical decolonial cartography as a possible language for communicating and better understanding complex, intergenerational experiences of genocide and colonialism among Native American peoples. Utilizing a self-reflexive methodology, this work makes interventions in Native American and indigenous studies, comparative genocide studies, historiography, and geography to argue for more expansive languages with which to grapple with Native experiences of genocide. In so doing, this paper also asserts the need for indigenous narrative self-determination, development of decolon
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Gutman. "Ottoman Historiography and the End of the Genocide Taboo: Writing the Armenian Genocide into Late Ottoman History." Journal of the Ottoman and Turkish Studies Association 2, no. 1 (2015): 167. http://dx.doi.org/10.2979/jottturstuass.2.1.167.

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KALISHCHUK, Oksana. "Volyn tragedy of 1943 in contemporary Russian historical science and journalism." Ukraine-Poland: Historical Heritage and Public Consciousness 11 (2018): 108–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.33402/up.2018-11-108-121.

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The article analyses the main tendencies and peculiarities of functioning of certain aspects of Ukrainian-Polish relations during the Second World War in Russian historiography and journalism. The need to rethink the historiography of the Volyn tragedy in Russia is long overdue, so the role and importance of the identification function of historiography itself and the observance of the principle of objectivity in scientific and historical works have grown. Historiography provides a choice of research strategies, cognitive models, conceptual positions, and finally theoretical foundations for an
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11

Gabriel, Yiannis, and Peter Stokes. "Organizations and History – Are There Any Lessons to Be Learned From Genocide?" Problemy Zarządzania - Management Issues 2/2020, no. 88 (2020): 11–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.7172/1644-9584.88.1.

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Purpose: The paper seeks to demonstrate that genocide is not a phenomenon marginal to the world of management and organizations, but one from which these disciplines stand to learn a lot and one to which they must contribute their own insights. Approach: A historical and sociological review of some of the voluminous literature on genocide and the Nazi Holocaust. Findings: Genocide is a highly organized process, requiring bureaucratic resources to initiate, sustain and, often, cover it up. It generates resistance and compliance, it makes use of material and social technologies, it is imbued wit
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Dedering, Tilman. "The German‐Herero war of 1904: revisionism of genocide or imaginary historiography?" Journal of Southern African Studies 19, no. 1 (1993): 80–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03057079308708348.

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13

SIMM, GABRIELLE. "The Paris Peoples' Tribunal and the Istanbul Trials: Archives of the Armenian Genocide." Leiden Journal of International Law 29, no. 1 (2016): 245–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0922156515000734.

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AbstractThe decisions of international courts and tribunals affect how we read history. Alternative tribunals, such as peoples’ tribunals, attempt to write alternative histories to counter the official versions. This article locates controversies over the Armenian genocide in debates about the relationship between history and international law. It considers ways of reading archives and the role of archives in informing those debates. It compares the Istanbul war crimes trials held in 1919–1920 before the Ottoman Military Tribunals with the Paris session of the Permanent Peoples’ Tribunal held
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OMELCHAK, DMITRIJ VLADIMIROVICH, ALINA ALEKSANDROVNA UNIYATOVA, and BAINA YURIEVNA TUGUSOVA. "«The Goloshchekin genocide» in the historiography of Western Europe and the United States." Клио, no. 7 (2021): 50–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.51676/2070-9773_2021_07_50.

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15

ONYSHKO, LESIA. "THE HOLODOMOR OF 1932-1933 IN UKRAINE: MAIN STAGES OF SPREADING INFORMATION." Ukraine: Cultural Heritage, National Identity, Statehood 32 (2019): 66–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.33402/ukr.2019-32-66-85.

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The study describes stages of spreading information about the Holodomor1932-1933 by national and world public highlights specifics and features of it in the Soviet and post-Soviet periods. Historiography has been analyzed. The main features of the Soviet period are analyzed: total denial of the USSR leaders to the Holodomor and introduction of an information blockade on the territory of the Union; prosecution for any mention of the Holodomor; discrediting persons who spread information; concealment, falsification or destruction of incriminating documents; creation of agents network and introdu
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Dolbee, Samuel. "The Desert at the End of Empire: An Environmental History of the Armenian Genocide*." Past & Present 247, no. 1 (2020): 197–233. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtz055.

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Abstract In the contentious historiography of the Armenian genocide, the desert has been acknowledged by almost everyone as the endpoint of the deportations of hundreds of thousands of Ottoman Armenian citizens in 1915 and the years that followed. Those who use the term ‘genocide’ suggest that this action was tantamount to a death sentence, while those who oppose the term claim that the desert exculpates the Ottoman state. This article unpacks the meaning of the Jazira region — one of the arid regions to which Armenians were sent — and suggests how Ottoman officials used the desert to kill and
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Peiser, Benny. "From Genocide to Ecocide: The Rape of Rapa Nui." Energy & Environment 16, no. 3-4 (2005): 513–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1260/0958305054672385.

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The ‘decline and fall’ of Easter Island and its alleged self-destruction has become the poster child of a new environmentalist historiography, a school of thought that goes hand-in-hand with predictions of environmental disaster. Why did this exceptional civilisation crumble? What drove its population to extinction? These are some of the key questions Jared Diamond endeavours to answer in his new book Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Survive. According to Diamond, the people of Easter Island destroyed their forest, degraded the island's topsoil, wiped out their plants and drove their
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18

Mayer, Gabriel. "Holocaust and Parallax." Advances in Social Sciences Research Journal 7, no. 7 (2020): 189–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.14738/assrj.77.8645.

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Our objective is to demonstrate the shifting nature of Holocaust cultural memory and the attendant historiography as it accelerates in the chronotrope of present and future history. This is the manifestation of a parallax effect exacerbated and complicated by polity, transnational viewpoints on genocide, and the convenient utilization of a "unique event” as code language in real-time global politics and the necessities of economic value. What suffers is a myriad of cultural expressions ranging from literature to art and museology to heritage landscapes. This work leads into an expose to show h
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Goujon, Alexandra. "Memorial Narratives of WWII Partisans and Genocide in Belarus." East European Politics and Societies: and Cultures 24, no. 1 (2009): 6–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0888325409355818.

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The memory of WWII always played an important role in Belarus, which was characterized as a “Partisan Republic” during the Soviet time. Soviet historiography and memorial narrative emphasized the heroics of the resistance to fascism and allowed only a description of the crimes of the Nazis. New ways of looking at war events appeared during the perestroika and after the independence of the country. But after Alexander Lukashenko came to power as president in 1994, a neo-Soviet version of the past was adopted and spread. The Great Patriotic War (GPW) has become an increasingly publicized event i
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Andriewsky, Olga. "Towards a Decentred History: The Study of the Holodomor and Ukrainian Historiography." East/West: Journal of Ukrainian Studies 2, no. 1 (2015): 17. http://dx.doi.org/10.21226/t2301n.

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This article reviews research on the Holodomor by historians of Ukraine since the late 1980s. It examines the dominant trends in historiography, the major findings, and the current state of the field. The field itself, it argues, has grown considerably and there now exists a critical body of scholarship on the subject. For the past two decades, this scholarship has largely been dominated by the debate about whether the Holodomor constitutes genocide. Much of the focus has been on illuminating the policies, methods, and intentions of the Soviet leadership and there have been notable advances in
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21

Taylor, Rebe. "A Shocking New History? The Question of Historiography, Invasion, and Genocide in Nick Brodie’s The Vandemonian War." Journal of Genocide Research 20, no. 3 (2018): 451–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14623528.2018.1486306.

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22

WEEKS, GREGORY. "Understanding the Holocaust: The Past and Future of Holocaust Studies." Contemporary European History 15, no. 1 (2006): 117–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0960777306003134.

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Omer Bartov Germany's War and the Holocaust: Disputed Histories (Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 2003), 248 pp., (pb), ISBN 0801486815.Doris L. Bergen War and Genocide: A Concise History of the Holocaust (Lanham, MD, and Oxford: Rowman & Littlefield, 2003), 280 pp., $17.95 (pb), ISBN 0847696316.Inga Clendinnen Reading the Holocaust (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002), 238 pp., $15 (pb), ISBN 0521012694.Debórah Dwork ed., Voices & Views. A History of the Holocaust (New York: Jewish Foundation for the Righteous, 2002), 687 pp., $44.95 (pb), ISBN 0970060211.Cornelia
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23

Umeljic, Vladimir. "A paradigm shift in German historiography: In the state of Croatia (1941-1945) there was no genocide against the Serbs?" Zbornik Matice srpske za drustvene nauke, no. 141 (2012): 523–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/zmsdn1241523u.

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At the Humboldt University of Berlin, German historian Alexander Korb defended, with the highest grade (summa cum laude), his doctoral thesis in historical studies ?In the Shadow of the World War II. Mass violence by the Ustasa against Serbs, Jews and Roma?. His radically new thesis are as follows: 1) in the State of Croatia (1941-1945) ?there was no genocide against the Serbs?; 2) clerical component (Croatian Catholic clergy and the Vatican) ?played no significant role? in the mass violence against the Serbs in the State of Croatia (1941-1945), so the forced catholicization of the Serbs was ?
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Dolghin, Dana. "Institution and inclination in the post-socialist space: Genocide as “memory intervention”." Miscellanea Posttotalitariana Wratislaviensia 6 (October 10, 2017): 59–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.19195/2353-8546.6.6.

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Institution and Inclination in the Post-Socialist Space: Genocide as “Memory Intervention”This article investigates memory discourses around communism in Ukraine and Romania and the manner in which account­ability for the past has been mobilized to shape authoritative trauma based memorializations, public appropriations, and increasingly standardized manners of indexing the past. In the last decade, both countries have gone through successive attempts — through memory legislation, historical commis­sions and historiography — to include these negative historical narratives into an ideational re
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Górny, Maciej. "Niemcy w Warszawie po raz pierwszy. Nowsze opracowania na temat niemieckiej okupacji 1915–1918." Przegląd Humanistyczny 63, no. 1 (464) (2019): 129–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0013.4981.

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The article describes the newer works devoted to the occupation of Polish lands, especially of Warsaw during World War I. Recently, this subject, so far neglected, has drown the attention of numerous scientists, both from Poland and from abroad. Their point of view is different not only from the older perspectives, but also from the perspectives of slightly newer works on the other occupied areas and emphasizing the connection between the experience of the Great War and genocide during World War II. In the most precious fragments, the new historiography gives a very wide image of social life,
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Fisher, Gaëlle, and Maren Röger. "Bukovina: A Borderland Region in (Trans-)national Historiographies after 1945 and 1989–1991." East European Politics and Societies: and Cultures 33, no. 1 (2018): 176–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0888325418791019.

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This article is part of the special cluster titled Bukovina and Bukovinians after the Second World War: (Re)shaping and (re)thinking a region after genocide and ‘ethnic unmixing’, guest edited by Gaëlle Fisher and Maren Röger. This introductory essay provides an overview of the historiography of the borderland region of Bukovina after 1945 and 1989–1991. Presenting the approaches adopted in different national contexts after the end of the Second World War, it points to the methodological nationalism which characterized research on the region during the Cold War. We show that while the historio
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Cora, Yaşar Tolga. "Institutionalized migrant solidarity in the late Ottoman Empire: Armenian homeland associations (1800s–1920s)." New Perspectives on Turkey 63 (July 6, 2020): 55–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/npt.2020.16.

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By focusing on the Armenian homeland associations (hayrenakts‘akank‘) established in Istanbul in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, this article examines the migrants’ activism and their achievements—facilitated by affective bonds based on shared origins. It outlines the Istanbul-based homeland associations’ development chronologically and discusses their cultural and economic goals in their home regions in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The article then focuses on their durability and ability to adapt to the needs of the communities in the series of great political and dem
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Moicєєв, Дмитро. "MUHAMET-GERAI'S HAMAM: THE DISAPPEARED PART OF THE BAKHCHYSARAI PALACE." City History, Culture, Society, no. 10 (3) (November 17, 2020): 52–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.15407/mics2020.10.052.

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This article is about the problem of the historical topography of the downtown of Bakhchisarai -Hansaray. It was the centre of formation of the medieval city and the capital of the Crimean Khanate. A popular belief is that Hansaray is, in one sense, a copy and development of the idea of a medieval Eastern Palace (videlicet, the Top Cap in Istanbul) and dominates in historiography.
 The study of kırımlı cultural and historical heritage remains at a very low level as a result of permanent genocide by Russia empire in the XIX-XX centuries. This led to the development of a distorted picture o
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Bezirgan-Tanış, Bengi. "History-writing in Turkey through securitization discourses and gendered narratives." European Journal of Women's Studies 26, no. 3 (2019): 329–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1350506819855407.

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Since the official history-writing is a defining aspect for the formation and consolidation of nation-states, it is crucial to explore the attempts to legitimize particular discourses regarding historical atrocities. The selective representations of the past, in this regard, contradict counter-memories and propagate hegemonic patterns of remembrance and/or forgetting of past crimes. This article accordingly addresses how the representations of counter-memories as threats to national security and the silencing of gender-specific experiences and remembrances by sanctioned historical narratives b
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Stasiuk, Olesia. "To historiography of the research problem of the role of the commissioners and activists in the commitment of the Holodomor as the crime of genocide in Ukraine." Scientific Papers of the Kamianets-Podilskyi National Ivan Ohiienko University. History, no. 31 (March 30, 2021): 46–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.32626/2309-2254.2021-31.46-64.

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31

Holc, Janine P. "Working through Jan Gross'sNeighbors." Slavic Review 61, no. 3 (2002): 453–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3090294.

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In this forum onNeighborsby Jan T. Gross (Princeton, 2001), four scholars respond to the book and to the issues of evidence, causality, and interpretation that it raises. Janine P. Holc summarizes the contents and the book's approach and explores the roles of individual choice, on the one hand, and ethnic identity categories, on the other, in Gross's presentation of the causes of the massacre of the Jewish residents of Jedwabne by their non-Jewish neighbors. She argues for an approach to readingNeighborsthat links the emotive mode in which some of the narrative is expressed to a productive eng
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Roszkowski, Wojciech. "After Neighbors: Seeking Universal Standards." Slavic Review 61, no. 3 (2002): 460–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3090295.

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In this forum on Neighbors by Jan T. Gross (Princeton, 2001), four scholars respond to the book and to the issues of evidence, causality, and interpretation that it raises. Janine P. Holc summarizes the contents and the book's approach and explores the roles of individual choice, on the one hand, and ethnic identity categories, on the other, in Gross's presentation of the causes of the massacre of the Jewish residents of Jedwabne by their non-Jewish neighbors. She argues for an approach to reading Neighbors that links the emotive mode in which some of the narrative is expressed to a productive
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Hagen, William W. "A “Potent, Devilish Mixture” of Motives: Explanatory Strategy and Assignment of Meaning in Jan Gross'sNeighbors." Slavic Review 61, no. 3 (2002): 466–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3090296.

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In this forum onNeighborsby Jan T. Gross (Princeton, 2001), four scholars respond to the book and to the issues of evidence, causality, and interpretation that it raises. Janine P. Holc summarizes the contents and the book's approach and explores the roles of individual choice, on the one hand, and ethnic identity categories, on the other, in Gross's presentation of the causes of the massacre of the Jewish residents of Jedwabne by their non-Jewish neighbors. She argues for an approach to readingNeighborsthat links the emotive mode in which some of the narrative is expressed to a productive eng
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Naimark, Norman M. "The Nazis and “The East”: Jedwabne's Circle of Hell." Slavic Review 61, no. 3 (2002): 476–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3090297.

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In this forum onNeighborsby Jan T. Gross (Princeton, 2001), four scholars respond to the book and to the issues of evidence, causality, and interpretation that it raises. Janine P. Holc summarizes the contents and the book's approach and explores the roles of individual choice, on the one hand, and ethnic identity categories, on the other, in Gross's presentation of the causes of the massacre of the Jewish residents of Jedwabne by their non-Jewish neighbors. She argues for an approach to readingNeighborsthat links the emotive mode in which some of the narrative is expressed to a productive eng
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Gross, Jan T. "A Response." Slavic Review 61, no. 3 (2002): 483–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3090298.

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In this forum on Neighbors by Jan T. Gross (Princeton, 2001), four scholars respond to the book and to the issues of evidence, causality, and interpretation that it raises. Janine P. Holc summarizes the contents and the book's approach and explores the roles of individual choice, on the one hand, and ethnic identity categories, on the other, in Gross's presentation of the causes of the massacre of the Jewish residents of Jedwabne by their non-Jewish neighbors. She argues for an approach to reading Neighbors that links the emotive mode in which some of the narrative is expressed to a productive
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Liakos, Antonis. "Historisising twentieth-century historiography." Historein 16, no. 1-2 (2017): 139. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/historein.10030.

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The twentieth century has been described as a dark century of wars, holocausts, death and pain. This is true, but it is only a partial image of the century. This article discusses five major challenges and their relations to historiography: a) the disintegration of empires, decolonisation and the rise of new nations; b) the impact of world wars (genocides, revolutions, totalitarian regimes); c) the boom in technoscience and the digital era; d) the ascent of rights, the transformation of gender relations and mass literacy; and e) globalisation. These changes were experienced by three generation
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Đozić, Adib. "Identity and shame – How it seems from Bosniaks perspective. A contribution to the understanding of some characteristics of the national consciousness among Bosniaks." Historijski pogledi 4, no. 5 (2021): 258–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.52259/historijskipogledi.2021.4.5.258.

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The relationship between identity and national consciousness is one of the important issues, not only, of the sociology of identity but of the overall opinion of the social sciences. This scientific question has been insufficiently researched in the sociological thought of Bosnia and Herzegovina, and with this paper we are trying to actualize it. Aware of theoretical-methodological and conceptual-logical difficulties related to the research problem, we considered that in the first part of the paper we make some theoretical-methodological notes on the problems in studying this phenomenon, in or
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Grigoryan Savary, Gohar. "Medieval contexts and modern realities of a Genocide-survivor artwork." Journal of the Society for Armenian Studies 27, no. 1 (2020): 117–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/26670038-12342704.

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Abstract This article is a critical review of Heghnar Watenpaugh’s monograph The Missing Pages, which traces the history of the thirteenth-century Zeytun Gospels from its creation to the 2010s, when several of the manuscript’s illustrated folios became subject to a restitution claim through a lawsuit filed by the Armenian Church against the Getty Museum. It highlights the importance of Watenpaugh’s publication on assembling and clarifying the impressive itinerary of the Zeytun Gospels, the manuscript’s sociocultural functions, as well as the historiographic research on Cilician miniature paint
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Gray, Peter. "Was the Great Irish Famine a Colonial Famine?" East/West: Journal of Ukrainian Studies 8, no. 1 (2021): 159–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.21226/ewjus643.

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This article reviews the historical debate on the colonial causation and dimensions of the Great Irish Famine of 1845-50. It does so by briefly reviewing the evolution of the colonial relationship between Great Britain and Ireland before focusing on a number of specific fields of debate relating to the coloniality of the Irish famine. These include the economic structures and dynamics developing over the century before 1845 and the vulnerability of Irish society, the vector of the potato blight and its impact on food availability, and, most extensively, the motivations for and characteristics
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Rosenblum, Warren. "The Law in Nazi Germany: Ideology, Opportunism, and the Perversion of Justice. Edited by Alan E. Steinweis and Robert D. Rachlin.New York: Berghahn Books, 2013. Pp. x+246. $85.00 (cloth); $85.00 (e-book).Reassessing the Nuremberg Military Tribunals: Transitional Justice, Trial Narratives, and Historiography. Edited by Kim C. Priemel and Alexa Stiller. War and Genocide, volume 16. Edited by Omer Bartov and A. Dirk Moses.New York: Berghahn Books, 2013. Pp. xii+321. $95.00 (cloth); $95.00 (e-book)." Journal of Modern History 88, no. 1 (2016): 235–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/684905.

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Uczkiewicz-Styś, Katarzyna. "„Słuchajcie, co wam teraz powiem…”, Obsługiwałem angielskiego króla Bohumila Hrabala – fikcja literacka a „historia opowiadana”." Wrocławski Rocznik Historii Mówionej 2 (October 30, 2012): 73–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.26774/wrhm.28.

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Oral history accounts area natural object of research for anthropologists, sociologists, researchers of cultural studies, ethnologists, as well as psychologists engaged in memory studies. As narratives of experience they became the antipositivist rebellion against the monopoly of major historical narratives that, according to the reflection of the second half of the 20th century, were supposed to lead to the catastrophes of war and genocide. 
 In historiographic research the questioned positivist discourse based on the corresponding theory of the truth has become counterbalanced by the di
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42

Antić, Marina. "Ivo Andrić: Against National Mythopoesis." Slavic Review 77, no. 3 (2018): 704–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/slr.2018.206.

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The national narrative spun around Ivo Andrić has held firm in both academic circles and popular imagination, despite several comprehensive attempts at correcting appropriations of his oeuvre for national narratives. This article critiques nationalist readings of Andrić by showing how in his most famous novel, The Bridge on the Drina, key passages most often associated with nationalist appropriation speak against rather than for national mythopoesis. Antić does so by re-focusing on the literary rather than historiographic reading of the novel, which is to say, by analyzing narrative strategies
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43

Podobied, Olena. "«THE BLACK DEEDS OF THE KREMLIN: A WHITE BOOK». UKRAINIAN EMIGRANTS TESTIFY ABOUT HOLODOMOR 1932–1933 YEARS." Intermarum history policy culture, no. 7 (January 28, 2020): 82–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.33287/112005.

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The article aim is to clarify significance of «The black deeds of the Kremlin: A white book» in respect to preservation Ukrainian nation historical memory and informing the world community about Holodomor (1932–1933 years) in Ukraine. The research methodological basis is fundamental principles of scientific cognition such as historicism, scientific nature, credibility and consistency. A number of specific historical methods are employed in the research to attain the outlined goal. They include a method of bibliography heuristics that helped to search for historiographic sources depending on th
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Dudley, Michael Q. "A Library Matter of Genocide: The Library of Congress and the Historiography of the Native American Holocaust." International Indigenous Policy Journal 8, no. 2 (2017). http://dx.doi.org/10.18584/iipj.2017.8.2.9.

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For decades, Indigenous experiences of mass killings, atrocities, ethnic cleansing, and assimilation have been marginalized from genocide studies due to the ways in which knowledge is constructed in the field, specifically in terms of its focus on definitions and prototype-based conceptions. This article argues that these exclusions are not merely owed to discourses internal to genocide studies, but are affirmed by conventional library terminologies for the purposes of knowledge organization and information retrieval in the form of Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH) and classification
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45

"The Historiography of genocide." Choice Reviews Online 46, no. 04 (2008): 46–2228. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/choice.46-2228.

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46

Hakobyan, Narine. "Western English-language Historiography of the Hamidian Massacres (1970s-2010s)." Ցեղասպանագիտական հանդես, January 30, 2021, 96–120. http://dx.doi.org/10.51442/jgs.0004.

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This historiographical essay explores how the scholarship on the Hamidian massacres has evolved in Western English-language scholarship over the past fifty years introducing the main debates on this topic. The discussion reveals that almost all scholars have reflected on the question of “continuity” between the Hamidian massacres and the Armenian Genocide. Arguing for or against the “continuity” they have made it perhaps the most discussed issue in the scholarship. This paper rejects this dichotomy and argues for a more complex view on Hamidian massacres that should consider both perspectives
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47

Kamusella, Tomasz. "Ethnicity and Estate: The Galician Jacquerie and the Rwandan Genocide Compared." Nationalities Papers, May 5, 2021, 1–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/nps.2021.12.

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Abstract In national historiography, estate (social) divisions are typically disregarded in favor of supposedly shared ethnicity, which is proposed to have united a given nation for centuries. Hence, the Polish national historiography is unable to account for the Galician Jacquerie (1846), when serfs were killing nobles, despite their (retroactively) assumed shared Polish ethnicity. On the other hand, the 1994 mass massacre of the Tutsis by Hutus is recognized as the Rwandan Genocide, though both groups share the same language, culture, and religion—or what is usually understood as ethnicity.
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48

Krausz, Tamás. "Hungarian Troops in World War II: The Bitter Truth of Archival Documents and an Attempt at Revision." Quaestio Rossica 8, no. 3 (2020). http://dx.doi.org/10.15826/qr.2020.3.506.

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This study analyses how Hungarian historiography reflects the revision of the results of the Great Patriotic War. From the position of the ideas of totalitarianism, Hungarian historian Krisztián Ungváry equals the roles of Nazi Germany and the USSR played in World War II, thus equating the two regimes. A number of Hungarian historians distort the role of the Hungarian occupation army in the genocide on Soviet territory and falsify the history of the partisan war, ignoring the peculiar annihilative character of the Nazi war in the East. Ungváry completely overlooks the fundamental differences b
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Rysicz-Szafraniec, Julia. "Ukrainian ‘Working through the Past’ in the Context of the Polish–Ukrainian Dialogue on Volhynia-43. Asymmetry of Memory." European Review, May 18, 2020, 1–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1062798720000538.

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The modern Polish–Ukrainian dialogue is the second interstate dialogue of the twentieth century, in the development of which the historical and political discourses have played an important role. The so-called Volhynia discourse poses the most serious challenge in this dialogue, while at the same time being its main component. The article claims the Volhynia discourse plays a major role in bringing about the asymmetry of historical memory between the two states. The events of Volhynia-43 have remained in Polish historical memory as an act of genocide perpetrated in 1941–1943 by Ukrainian natio
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"HOLOCAUST REPRESENTATIONS IN PAINTING BY FELIX NUSSBAUM." Journal of V. N. Karazin Kharkiv National University, Series "The Theory of Culture and Philosophy of Science", no. 62 (2020). http://dx.doi.org/10.26565/2306-6687-2020-62-09.

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The article is devoted to the analysis of Holocaust representations in Felix Nussbaum’s paintings according to historical-philosophical, visual-anthropological, semiotic analysis. Topic of the article is justified by insufficient study of Holocaust images in painting, including the way of representation the memory of the Jewish genocide in painting, experience of deportation to death camps, Holocaust traumas. The relevance of the article is due to insufficient study of the work of the German artist of Jewish origin Felix Nussbaum, who was a victim of Holocaust. Nussbaum as an artist represents
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