This paper discusses and analyses the memorial complex of Tsitsernakaberd in Yerevan as an architectural and symbolic entity in relation to Armenian national identity in the aftermath of the Armenian genocide of 1915. How does this Soviet-era structure fulfil its role as a genocide memorial today, including its function as a forced substitute for the hundreds of holy places and the culture and life connected with them? On the one hand, this is only a small inquiry into the function of one building complex. Yet on the other hand, the topic is more essential than perhaps anything in history: the genocide memorial crystallises a set of profound questions, serious problems and agonising processes. An entire national existence can be crushed in...
Is the Armenian Genocide a strictly historical matter? If that is the case, why is it still a topica...
The scholarship on the Armenian Genocide has expanded enormously during the past three decades. Most...
This paper concerns the role of genocide in collective memory and its function for national identity...
This paper discusses and analyses the memorial complex of Tsitsernakaberd in Yerevan as an architec...
This paper discusses and analyses the memorial complex of Tsitsernakaberd in Yerevan as an architec...
This paper intends to shed light on the memory of the Armenian Genocide among the Armenian diaspora ...
PhD (Church and Dogma History), North-West University, Potchefstroom CampusThis piece of work descri...
The role of interpretation becomes fundamental in respect to unpacking memory, and by extension, elu...
This paper intends to shed light on the memory of the Armenian Genocide among the Armenian diaspora ...
Why should we return to the now 100-year-old genocide of the Ottoman Armenian population? The study ...
A response to Serafim Seppälä’s article ‘The “Temple of Non-Being” at Tsitsernakaberd and remembranc...
This article analyzes the public discourse on the Soviet history of Armenia provoked by the initiati...
Monuments serve to compress events and inform us about the way a culture deals with its past, as ref...
The centenary year of the Armenian genocide witnessed an escalation in cultural production and both ...
This talk focuses on a contrast between the continuing presence today of the sacred language of mart...
Is the Armenian Genocide a strictly historical matter? If that is the case, why is it still a topica...
The scholarship on the Armenian Genocide has expanded enormously during the past three decades. Most...
This paper concerns the role of genocide in collective memory and its function for national identity...
This paper discusses and analyses the memorial complex of Tsitsernakaberd in Yerevan as an architec...
This paper discusses and analyses the memorial complex of Tsitsernakaberd in Yerevan as an architec...
This paper intends to shed light on the memory of the Armenian Genocide among the Armenian diaspora ...
PhD (Church and Dogma History), North-West University, Potchefstroom CampusThis piece of work descri...
The role of interpretation becomes fundamental in respect to unpacking memory, and by extension, elu...
This paper intends to shed light on the memory of the Armenian Genocide among the Armenian diaspora ...
Why should we return to the now 100-year-old genocide of the Ottoman Armenian population? The study ...
A response to Serafim Seppälä’s article ‘The “Temple of Non-Being” at Tsitsernakaberd and remembranc...
This article analyzes the public discourse on the Soviet history of Armenia provoked by the initiati...
Monuments serve to compress events and inform us about the way a culture deals with its past, as ref...
The centenary year of the Armenian genocide witnessed an escalation in cultural production and both ...
This talk focuses on a contrast between the continuing presence today of the sacred language of mart...
Is the Armenian Genocide a strictly historical matter? If that is the case, why is it still a topica...
The scholarship on the Armenian Genocide has expanded enormously during the past three decades. Most...
This paper concerns the role of genocide in collective memory and its function for national identity...