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Armenians Beyond Diaspora Making Lebanon Their Own Tsolin Nalbantian

  • SKU: BELL-51975514
Armenians Beyond Diaspora Making Lebanon Their Own Tsolin Nalbantian
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Armenians Beyond Diaspora Making Lebanon Their Own Tsolin Nalbantian instant download after payment.

Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 6.85 MB
Pages: 240
Author: Tsolin Nalbantian
ISBN: 9781474458580, 1474458580
Language: English
Year: 2022

Product desciption

Armenians Beyond Diaspora Making Lebanon Their Own Tsolin Nalbantian by Tsolin Nalbantian 9781474458580, 1474458580 instant download after payment.

A socio-political and cultural history of the Armenians in Cold War Lebanon
  • Explores Lebanese Armenians’ changing views of their place in the making of the Lebanese state and its wider Arab environment, and in relation to the Armenian Socialist Soviet Republic
  • Challenges the dominant Armenian historiography, which treats Lebanese Armenians as a subsidiary of an Armenian global diaspora
  • Contributes to an understanding of the development of class and sectarian cleavages that led to the breakdown of civil society in Lebanon from 1975
  • Highlights the role of societal actors in the US–Soviet Cold War in the Middle East
  • Challenges the tendency to read Middle East history through the lens of dominant (Arab) nationalisms

This book argues that Armenians around the world – in the face of the Genocide, and despite the absence of an independent nation-state after World War I – developed dynamic socio-political, cultural, ideological and ecclesiastical centres. Tsolin Nalbantian focuses on one such centre, Beirut, in the postcolonial 1940s and 1950s. Nalbantian explores Armenians’ discursive re-positioning within the newly independent Lebanese nation-state; the political-cultural impact (in Lebanon as well as Syria) of the 1946–48 repatriation initiative to Soviet Armenia; the 1956 Catholicos election; and the 1957 Lebanese elections and 1958 mini-civil war. What emerges is a post-Genocide Armenian history of – principally – power, renewal and presence, rather than one of loss and absence.

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