IntroductionPart I: Memory and History of a DominationChapter 1: International dominationChapter 2: Political and religious dominationChapter 3: Socioeconomic dominationPart II: Attempts to break from the HistoryChapter 1: The Revolutionary movement, 1878-1914Chapter 2: Finding a new historicity to a fragmented identity, 1920-1988Chapter 3: Rebirth of a sovereign state, 1988-1998Part III: Power of MemoryChapter 1: Glory and misery of the cultural haitadist revolutionChapter 2: The Armenian State's memory politic, 1998-nowChapter 3: Turkey, an exceptional case of negationismPart IV: Beyond the GenocideChapter 1: Democratisation of the identityChapter 2: Voices and ways to dialog with the TurksChapter 3: Supporting the international and scientific community's engagementConclusionBibliographyAcknowledgment
Gaïdz Minassian is a French journalist at the daily Le Monde. He holds a PhD in Political Science, is a teacher at Sciences Po Paris and serves as an international expert at the Center for International Research (CERI). He is the author of several books on international relations, the South Caucasus and Armenia.