Cultural History of Genocide in the Early Modern World

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20th century
Aboriginal Australians
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armenian genocide
Auschwitz
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colonial genocides
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ethnic cleansing
final solution
first nations
First World War
German South West Africa
Herero people
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indigenous people
inter war period
Japanese empire
Jewish history
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mass extermination
mass violence
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racial supremacy
second world war
settler colonialism
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state violence
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Product details

  • ISBN 9781350034839
  • Weight: 640g
  • Dimensions: 170 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 04 May 2023
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Historical studies of genocide in the 20th century trace the roots back to the sociopolitical, economic, and cultural developments of the early modern period. From globalization to urbanization, to imperialism, state formation and homogenization, from religious warfare to enlightenment, to racism: many factors connected with genocide first emerged or vastly developed between the 15th and 18th centuries. While the early modern period did not have a crime of genocide, it possessed its own legal system which contemplated the rightful destruction of whole peoples, and a political culture that sanctioned the use of mass violence. As a result, early modern genocide has been denied or blurred as a regrettable side effect of the global circulation of ideas, goods, and peoples, and the creation of new societies, cultures, and languages arising from it.

This collection looks at the different genocides which unfolded around the globe, emphasizing its gendered dimension and its disproportionate and enduring impact on indigenous populations. Although European imperialism and homogenization play a central role, it aims more widely to cover the principal agents, victims and rationale for genocide in the early modern world. As a whole, this volume aims at fostering the debate on the early modern history of genocide, not as an insulated or secondary subject, but as a central issue of the era with profound implications for our own.

Igor Pérez Tostado is Lecturer in Early Modern History at the University Pablo de Olavide, Spain. He is the author of Anglo-Spanish Relations during the English Civil Wars: Assassination, War and Diplomacy in Early Modern Europe (forthcoming) and Irish Influence at the Court of Spain in the Seventeenth Century (2008).