01549nam 22002653 4500011001300000090001500013099000900028100004100037101000800078102002000086106000600106110001600112200006500128205004900193207008100242210005100323215004600374330072300420610002601143720000801169721000801177722000801185801001301193995007701206 a00207438 93142a3142 tARTI a20130321d1991 m||y0frey50 ba aeng 2Etats-Unis aUS ar a|||| |||| aInternational Journal of Middle East Studiesvvol. 23 - n°4 aInternational Journal of Middle East Studies anovember 1991, vol. 23, No. 4zInternational Journal of Middle East Studies  aEtats-Unis cCambridge University Press d1991 a1 vol. (223p. de 483 à 706 +9pl.)d25cm aThe deportation of the majority of the Armenian population from the Ottoman Empire during World War I and the massacres that accompanied it are of commanding interest. The paucity of scholarly contributions in this area, however, has impeded the development of interest in the subject, thereby contributing to the nebulous state surrounding the conditions that led to the disappearance of an entire nation from its ancestral territories. Some maintain that this nebulousness is compounded by the intrusion of political calculation.1 At issue is whether or not the disaster was intentionally organized by the Ottoman authorities, and whether or not the scope of Armenian losses bore any relationship to that intention.. aArmenian -- Genocide  4070 4070 4070 c21032013 94219bMCADcMCADeSalle de lecturefGENETU51991kGEN ETU 5.1991o0rARTI