ABSTRACT

The Routledge History of Genocide takes an interdisciplinary yet historically focused look at history from the Iron Age to the recent past to examine episodes of extreme violence that could be interpreted as genocidal. Approaching the subject in a sensitive, inclusive and respectful way, each chapter is a newly commissioned piece covering a range of opinions and perspectives. The topics discussed are broad in variety and include:

  • genocide and the end of the Ottoman Empire
  • Stalin and the Soviet Union
  • Iron Age warfare
  • genocide and religion
  • Japanese military brutality during the Second World War
  • heritage and how we remember the past.

The volume is global in scope, something of increasing importance in the study of genocide. Presenting genocide as an extremely diverse phenomenon, this book is a wide-ranging and in-depth view of the field that will be valuable for all those interested in the historical context of genocide.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

Raphael Lemkin, historians and genocide

part |95 pages

Genocide in Historical Contexts

chapter |14 pages

Genocide and mass murder in Second Iron Age Europe

Methodological issues and case studies in the Iberian Peninsula

chapter |15 pages

Tudor Ireland

Anglicisation, mass killing and security

chapter |17 pages

To whom do the children belong?

Genocidal displacement in Europe and Australia

chapter |22 pages

The Great Purge in Ukraine

The German Operation of the NKVD (1937–8)

chapter |14 pages

Responding to the Holocaust

Bystanders, colonialism and conflicting priorities

part |79 pages

Genocide and ideologiesof race, class and nation

chapter |17 pages

The Perfect Storm

Japanese military brutality during World War Two

chapter |13 pages

Cambodia

Paranoia, xenophobia, genocide and auto-genocide

chapter |15 pages

Rethinking violence

Motives and modes of mass murder in the independent state of Croatia, 1941–5

chapter |17 pages

Genocide in the Great Lakes

part |71 pages

Interpreting Genocide

chapter |11 pages

Writing ‘history' for Hitler

Holocaust denial since 1945

chapter |20 pages

‘White genocide'

Postwar fascism and the ideological value of evoking existential conflicts

chapter |14 pages

‘Those who have the sin . . . go to this side'

Genocide and religion

chapter |14 pages

Cultural genocide

Destruction of material and non-material human culture

part |78 pages

Mass Violence, War and Genocide

chapter |21 pages

Police forces and the Holocaust

German perpetrators and local collaborators1

chapter |12 pages

Masking genocide in Bosnia

chapter |13 pages

Nuclear weapons and genocide

Lessons from 1940