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Book Review: They can Live in the Desert But Nowhere Else

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  • Book Review: They can Live in the Desert But Nowhere Else

    Kirkus Reviews (Print)
    February 1, 2015, Sunday


    "THEY CAN LIVE IN THE DESERT BUT NOWHERE ELSE"

    A History of the Armenian Genocide

    NONFICTION


    An authoritative examination of unspeakable horrors.A century after
    the elimination of millions of Armenians from the Ottoman Empire, Suny
    (History/Univ. of Michigan; The Structure of Soviet History: Essays
    and Documents, 2013, etc.) unequivocally calls the event "genocide,"
    as distinguished from ethnic cleansing, purges and other forms of mass
    killing.

    "Genocide," he writes, "is not the murder of people but the murder of
    a people." His deeply researched, fair-minded study probes the "two
    separate, contradictory narratives" of the event that still persist:
    the Turkish denial of genocide, representing the killings as a
    rational response to a rebellious, traitorous population that
    threatened the survival of the state; and Armenian characterization of
    the tragedy as the ferocious determination of imperialist Turkish
    Muslims to rid the empire of non-Muslims. Drawing on archival sources,
    Suny, whose great-grandparents were victims of the massacre,
    thoroughly traces "the genealogy of attitudes and behaviors" and the
    historical context "that triggered a deadly, pathological response to
    real and imagined immediate and future dangers." For hundreds of
    years, he writes, Armenians, although subjects of the Muslim state,
    were integrated into a multinational empire. As nationalist and reform
    movements arose in the 19th century, however, Ottoman rulers
    legitimized their position by identifying certain populations-in this
    case, non-Muslim Armenians, Greeks and Jews-as inferior, devious and
    subversive. Armenian intellectuals' affinity for European ideas and "a
    powerful sense of secular nationality" made the ethnic group
    especially suspect. Late in the century, Armenians' victimization by
    Ottomans came to the attention of European powers, which further
    fueled Muslims' conception of them as alien and alienated. From
    1894-1896, extensive massacres intimated what would occur later, when
    the militant Young Turks envisioned an ethnonational state that
    required the extermination of non-Turks, a policy exacerbated by
    social, political and economic chaos at the start of World War I.
    Identifying the Ottomans' decisive choices, Suny creates a compelling
    narrative of vengeance and terror.

    Publication Date: 2015-04-01
    Publisher: Princeton Univ.
    Stage: Adult
    ISBN: 978-0-691-14730-7
    Price: $35.00
    Author: Suny, Ronald Grigor

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