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This book looks at the way the 2020 Second Nagorno Karabakh War allowed urban spectacular transformation in war actors attitudes towards space and transnationalism. It concentrates on some specific events, including pre- and wartime life in the Nagorno Karabakh political capital Stepanakert and compelling historical and cultural heritage issues in the cultural capital Shushi and its meaning for the Armenian population worldwide. Attention is placed both on wartime social and urban changes and to the destruction, or attempted destruction, of Armenians cultural heritage during the conflict and in post-war Azerbaijani occupation. The first part of the book reconstructs the historic and religious context of Nagorno Karabakh, linking it with the regional geo-political dimension; meanwhile, the case studies analysed in the second part of the book will help understand spatial meanings (e.g., towns, cultural centres, monasteries) and the symbolic value of urban heritage while also discussing some conflict markers in the context of theories of transnationalism and diaspora studies.
List of contents
Chapter 1: Introduction.- Part I: From the origin to the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War.- Chapter 2: Nagorno-Karabakh as an Ethnographic Site in the Armenian Anthropological Tradition.- Chapter 3: Artsakh: from the Origin to the to Autonomous Region under the Soviet Azerbaijani Republic.- Chapter 4: The Making of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic.- Part 2: Case Studies: Conflict, Heritage and Transnationalism.- Chapter 5: Stepanakert: the political-institutional dimension of the conflict.- Chapter 6: Shushi: the religious dimension of the conflict.- Chapter 7: Transnationalism and War: Violence from Syria to Karabakh.- Chapter 8: Space and War. Cultural cleansing.- Chapter 9: Conclusions.
About the author
Marcello Mollica is Associate Professor of Cultural Anthropology and Ethnology at the University of Messina, Italy.
Arsen Hakobyan is Leading Research Fellow at the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography at the National Academy of Sciences of Armenia.
Summary
This book looks at the way the 2020 Second Nagorno Karabakh War allowed urban spectacular transformation in war actors’ attitudes towards space and transnationalism. It concentrates on some specific events, including pre- and wartime life in the Nagorno Karabakh political capital Stepanakert and compelling historical and cultural heritage issues in the cultural capital Shushi and its meaning for the Armenian population worldwide. Attention is placed both on wartime social and urban changes and to the destruction, or attempted destruction, of Armenians cultural heritage during the conflict and in post-war Azerbaijani occupation. The first part of the book reconstructs the historic and religious context of Nagorno Karabakh, linking it with the regional geo-political dimension; meanwhile, the case studies analysed in the second part of the book will help understand spatial meanings (e.g., towns, cultural centres, monasteries) and the symbolic value of urban heritage while also discussing some conflict markers in the context of theories of transnationalism and diaspora studies.