Armenia has a history marked by traumatic and harrowing events. In the 20th century, it endured the Armenian Genocide, recognized as the first genocide of such magnitude committed against an ethnic group by a state government with the intention of erasing all existence and memory of it from the land...

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Hoofdauteur: Arthur Atanesyan
Formaat: Artikel
Online toegang:https://doaj.org/article/4b910824f29e4210a5f2cdefc27393ea
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author Arthur Atanesyan
author_facet Arthur Atanesyan
date_str_mv 2024-12-01T00:00:00Z
description Armenia has a history marked by traumatic and harrowing events. In the 20th century, it endured the Armenian Genocide, recognized as the first genocide of such magnitude committed against an ethnic group by a state government with the intention of erasing all existence and memory of it from the land where the Armenian people originated. A nation that has endured genocide must learn lessons to prevent such atrocities from happening again. Failure to draw the right conclusions and implement appropriate policies in a timely manner can result in similar threats reemerging. Every nation must remember its traumatic events in a manner that enables and encourages necessary policies and actions. If similar risks and threats reappear, it may indicate that the nation has either failed to remember its traumatic past in a way that serves it instrumentally and pragmatically or has not remembered it at all. Have Armenians adequately remembered their Genocide? If so, why is there a resurgence of the risk of another genocide affecting the Armenian population, not only in Karabakh but also in Armenia, in modern times? Do Armenians need to reconsider their politics of memory in this context, and if so, are they doing it correctly? This paper critically addresses these questions, accompanied by a brief conceptual exploration and case studies.
doi_str 10.46991/BYSU.F/2024.15.2.15
format Article
id oai_oai_doaj.org_article_4b910824f29e4210a5f2cdefc27393ea
issn_str_mv 2579-2938
2738-263X
language_str_mv EN
HY
RU
oai_datestamp_str 2025-01-01T16:47:52Z
oai_identifier_str oai:doaj.org/article:4b910824f29e4210a5f2cdefc27393ea
publisher_str Yerevan State University
relation_str_mv https://journals.ysu.am/index.php/bulletin-ysu-sociology/article/view/12523
https://doaj.org/toc/2579-2938
https://doaj.org/toc/2738-263X
source_str JOURNAL_A
source_txt Banber Erevani Hamalsarani. Sots'iologia, Vol 15, Iss 2 (40) (2024)
spellingShingle TRAUMATIC PAST AND THE POLITICS OF MEMORY: WHAT SHOULD BE AND SHOULD NOT BE THE ARMENIAN APPROACH?
Arthur Atanesyan
subject_str_mv Culture of memory
models of memory
politics of memory
identity
Genocide prevention
Armenia
Sociology (General)
HM401-1281
title TRAUMATIC PAST AND THE POLITICS OF MEMORY: WHAT SHOULD BE AND SHOULD NOT BE THE ARMENIAN APPROACH?
type_str article
url https://doaj.org/article/4b910824f29e4210a5f2cdefc27393ea