Worcester to host conference on Turkey’s denial of Genocide

Worcester to host conference on Turkey’s denial of Genocide

PanARMENIAN.Net - Four academic centers and institutions have teamed up to organize a conference on “Manufacturing Denial and the Assault on Scholarship and Truth,” to be held on October 24-25, 2014, at Worcester State University and Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts, U.S.

The academic conference will bring together, for the first time, social scientists and natural scientists to discuss the analogous and interrelated, though not always identical, phenomena of genocide denial and the denial of scientific truth—from evolution to climate change.

The conference is co-sponsored and organized by the Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies; the Kaloosdian/Mugar Chair in Modern Armenian History and Genocide Studies, Clark University; Worcester State University; the Armenian Genocide Program, CGHR, Rutgers University-Newark; and the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR).

The conference will open at Worcester State University on Oct 24 with a keynote address by Prof. Brendan J. Nyhan and a response by Prof. Henry Theriault.

Professor Nyhan is assistant professor in the Department of Government at Dartmouth College and a former Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Scholar in Health Policy Research at the University of Michigan. His research focuses on political scandal and misperceptions about politics and health care.

His work has been published in several prestigious journals and he has served as contributor to the New York Times politics/policy website The Upshot, and media critic for Columbia Journalism Review. Nyhan is co-author of “All the President’s Spin,” a New York Times bestseller.

Prof. Theriault is chair of the Philosophy Department at Worcester State University. His research focuses on philosophical approaches to genocide issues, especially genocide denial, long-term justice, and the role of violence against women in genocide.

The following day, sessions held at Clark University will explore “Modern Strategies and Rhetoric of Denial,” “Political Uses of Denial,” and “Countering Denial: How and When?” The conference will conclude with a summing up and open discussion session. Further information about the participants and schedule will be released at a later date.

Since the 1980s, genocide denial, particularly of the Holocaust and the Armenian Genocide, has generated a substantial body of literature analyzing and documenting the methods and rhetoric of those who seek to negate or obscure documented cases of mass violence. More recently, an impressive amount of literature has explored the ways in which various industries and political operatives have used the strategy of “manufacturing doubt” to undermine the scientific consensus on smoking, pollution, evolution, and global warming. Nonetheless, the corruption and co-opting of scholarship for the purposes of fomenting denial continues.

Although these efforts stretch from governments to corporations to grass roots organizations, the focus of this conference will be on the ways in which the corruption and co-opting of scholarship and the academy function as part of a struggle that resonates far beyond academia.

The Armenian Genocide

The Armenian Genocide (1915-23) was the deliberate and systematic destruction of the Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire during and just after World War I. It was characterized by massacres and deportations, involving forced marches under conditions designed to lead to the death of the deportees, with the total number of deaths reaching 1.5 million.

The majority of Armenian Diaspora communities were formed by the Genocide survivors.

Present-day Turkey denies the fact of the Armenian Genocide, justifying the atrocities as “deportation to secure Armenians”. Only a few Turkish intellectuals, including Nobel Prize winner Orhan Pamuk and scholar Taner Akcam, speak openly about the necessity to recognize this crime against humanity.

The Armenian Genocide was recognized by Uruguay, Russia, France, Lithuania, Italy, 45 U.S. states, Greece, Cyprus, Lebanon, Argentina, Belgium, Austria, Wales, Switzerland, Canada, Poland, Venezuela, Chile, Bolivia, the Vatican, Luxembourg, Brazil, Germany, the Netherlands, Paraguay, Sweden, Venezuela, Slovakia, Syria, Vatican, as well as the European Parliament and the World Council of Churches.

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