Encyclopedia of Genocide ANNOTATION
Alphabetical entries define names, places, and events associated with genocide, and major sections deal with the Armenian genocide, the Holocaust, and the process, detection, denial, and prevention of genocide.
FROM THE PUBLISHER
The ethnic cleansing in Kosovo is a dreary reminder of a long tradition. Genocide, from ancient times to the present day, has a worldwide history. It is hard to write about the subject with dispassion.
The Encyclopedia of Genocide is the first reference work to chart the full extent of this horrific subject with objectivity and authority. The Nazi Holocaust; the genocides in Armenia, Cambodia, Rwanda, and the former Yugoslavia; and the eradication of indigenous peoples around the world are all covered in A-to-Z entries, written by almost 100 experts from many countries.
Among those who have contributed to the Encyclopedia are such authorities as Elie Wiesel, Robert Lifton, Simon Wiesenthal, Michael Berenbaum, Yehuda Bauer, and Jacobo Timmerman.
Coverage spans perpetrators and victims of all known genocides:
treatment of survivors
the bewildering variety of definitions of genocide
detection, investigation, and prevention
psychology and ideology
the often contentious literature on the subject
scholars and organizations
the important and controversial topic of genocide denial
Special features:
200+ entries, each with leads to further information
90+ scholarly contributors from around the world
Numerous primary source documents
Comprehensive coverage of all known genocides
Wide array of scholarly viewpoints
Sidebars that place a human face on genocide's destruction and pain
Full index
FROM THE CRITICS
Booknews
Charts the global extent of attempts to destroy a people, mostly during the 20th century. Includes traditional entries summarizing knowledge, feature entries offering interpretation, features filling in background, verbatim texts of source documents, and a few black- and-white photographs. They discuss such aspects as the architects and victims of major genocide events, how survivors were treated and what happened to them, the variety of definitions, the uniqueness of the Holocaust, humanitarian intervention and the role of the United Nations, the psychology and ideology behind genocide, early warnings, why people deny genocide, and new developments in law and international responses. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)