Available Formats
The Armenian Genocide and Turkey: Public Memory and Institutionalized Denial
By (Author) Hakan Seckinelgin
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
I.B. Tauris
18th April 2024
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Political oppression and persecution
956.620154
Hardback
224
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
How is official denial of the Armenian genocide maintained in Turkey In this book, Hakan Seckinelgin investigates the mechanisms by which denial of the events of 1915 are reproduced in official discourse, and the effect this has on Turkish citizens. Examining state education, media discourse, academic publications, as well as public events debating the Armenian genocide, the book argues that, at the public level, there exists a grammar or repertoire of denial in Turkey which regulates how the issue can be publicly conceptualised and understood. The books careful analysis examines the way that knowledge about the genocide is censored in Turkey, from the language that must be used to publicly discuss it, to the complex way in which selective knowledge and erased history is reproduced, from 1915 and subsequent generations until today. It argues that denialism has become important to a certain kind Turkish national identity and belonging and suggests ways in which this relationship can be unpicked in future.
Hakan Seckinelgin is Reader in International Social Policy at the London School of Economics and Political Science, UK. He is the author of International Security, Conflict and Gender (2012), and Editor in Chief of the Journal of Civil Society.