Armenian, Greek, and Assyrian Genocide Recognition in Twenty-First Century Australia

kritikakos recognition memory

Armenian, Greek, and Assyrian Genocide Recognition in Twenty-First Century Australia: Memory, Identity, and Cooperation.
Themistocles Kritikakos. 
Palgrave Macmillan 2026.

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ABOUT THIS BOOK

While the Armenian Genocide has received significant international recognition, the related experiences of Greeks and Assyrians are largely unknown and overlooked. In an original contribution to genocide studies, Themistocles Kritikakos examines the enduring legacies of the Armenian, Greek, and Assyrian genocides in the late Ottoman Empire (1914–1923). This book presents the first comprehensive comparative analysis of their efforts to achieve genocide recognition in Australia, advancing our understanding of the Ottoman genocidal campaign and its long-term consequences.

Australians witnessed and reported the atrocities and suffering, and provided humanitarian support to survivors between 1915 and 1930. Yet Australian national narratives of reconciliation with Turkey around the Gallipoli Campaign (1915) are in persistent tension with the recognition efforts.

Drawing from oral interviews with descendants of survivors and research in memory and genocide studies, the book explores the intergenerational effects of silence and memories of violence and displacement within families and communities in the diaspora. It examines commemorative practices, sites of memory, and intercommunal coalition-building.

Kritikakos sheds new light on how individuals, families, and communities process and negotiate traumatic experiences across time and place. The study demonstrates how communities that once remembered traumatic pasts separately have developed shared narratives through new forms of remembrance, strengthening their pursuit of recognition.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

  • Introduction
  • The Late Ottoman Genocides: Historical Context, Academic Debates, and Legacy
  • The Tapestry of Trauma: Silence and Storytelling in the Greek and Assyrian Experiences
  • Transforming Memories: The Intersection of Commemoration, Identity, and Monuments
  • Intercommunal Cooperation: Establishing a Shared Experience and Genocide Recognition
  • From Humanitarianism to Recognition: Australia and the Politics of Memory
  • Conclusion

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