On December 7,1988, the northwest region of Soviet Armenia, including Leninakan, the republic's second largest city, was devastated by an earthquake which left tens of thousands dead and forced the central government, for the first time in Soviet history, to call for
international assistance.
Armenia in Crisis documents the tragic Armenian earthquake and the surrounding political controversies that rocked the Soviet Union and contributed to its collapse. In sparse and gripping prose, Pierre Verluise, a French journalist and Soviet specialist, uses the accounts of survivors and relief workers to tell the story of this catastrophe in its human and political dimensions. Relying on personal
interviews and press reports, he recounts the destruction and despair, the emotional reactions of survivors and relief workers, the political struggles between Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev and the Armenians, and the shortcomings in Soviet construction methods and disaster preparedness.
Verluise examines the Armenian catastrophe in a broader historical context, chronicling the political events associated with the earthquake. Throughout 1988, thousands of Armenians had protested, calling for the return of the Armenian-populated enclave of Nagorno-Karabagh, which had been assigned to the neighboring republic of Azerbaijan by
Stalin in the early 1920s. The massive protests and Mikhail Gorbachev's inability to respond effectively quickly alienated Armenians and Azerbaijanis and added to the growing and, finally, unmanageable Soviet political crisis.
Finally, while Verluise successfully examines issues that are unique and particular to Armenia, he also provides insight into human behavior and reactions that result from being faced with sudden, massive, and irrevocable loss, and the slow, painful rebuilding of a shattered world.
The new epilogue by translator Levon Chorbajian completes Verluise's story of human loss and high political drama, with updates of Armenia's independence, the Soviet Union's demise, and the still uncompleted task of earthquake
reconstruction.
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Pierre Verluise is a journalist with Radio France International and a historian who specializes in Soviet and post-Soviet society.
Levon Chorbajian, a former Fulbright senior lecturer in Armenia, is a professor of sociology at the University of Massachusetts, Lowell. He is the coauthor of The Caucasian Knot: The History and Geopolitics of Nagorno-Karabagh (Zed Books, 1994). He
received his Ph.D. from Brandeis University.
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