In the Aftermath of Genocide: Armenians and Jews in Twentieth-Century France

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$40.04 - $49.93
UPC:
9780822331216
Maximum Purchase:
2 units
Binding:
Paperback
Publication Date:
7/4/2003
Release Date:
7/4/2003
Author:
Maud S. Mandel
Language:
english

Product Overview

France is the only Western European nation home to substantial numbers of survivors of the World War I and World War II genocides. In the Aftermath of Genocide offers a unique comparison of the countrys Armenian and Jewish survivor communities. By demonstrating howin spite of significant differences between these two populationsstriking similarities emerge in the ways each responded to genocide, Maud S. Mandel illuminates the impact of the nation-state on ethnic and religious minorities in twentieth-century Europe and provides a valuable theoretical framework for considering issues of transnational identity. Investigating each communitys response to its violent past, Mandel reflects on how shifts in ethnic, religious, and national affiliations were influenced by that groups recent history. The book examines these issues in the context of Frances long commitment to a politics of integration and homogenizationa politics geared toward the establishment of equal rights and legal status for all citizens, but not toward the accommodation of cultural diversity.

In the Aftermath of Genocide reveals that Armenian and Jewish survivors rarely sought to shed the obvious symbols of their ethnic and religious identities. Mandel shows that following the 1915 genocide and the Holocaust, these communities, if anything, seemed increasingly willing to mobilize in their own self-defense and thereby call attention to their distinctiveness. Most Armenian and Jewish survivors were neither prepared to give up their minority status nor willing to migrate to their national homelands of Armenia and Israel. In the Aftermath of Genocide suggests that the consolidation of the nation-state system in twentieth-century Europe led survivors of genocide to fashion identities for themselves as ethnic minorities despite the dangers implicit in that status.

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