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Introduction: Social histories of persecution and mass violence
Strategies of survival: Genocide and Armenian deportee labor, 1915-1918
The family under duress: A male perspective
"He was in our home like our own child": Discourses of surrogacy and family relations after the Holocaust
Strangers in a strange land: Refugees in Belarusian society under German occupation (1941-1944)
Caught between the guerrilla and the colonial state: Refugee life in Northern Mozambique during the Independence War (1964-1974)
Space and place: Placing everyday life during the Holocaust
Hiding in the attic: Sounds and social situation
Auditory quarrels, rage and collective action: A street singer and his audience within the web of the ghetto society
People Fell Like Flies: How Yiddish songs document history and collective action during the Holocaust in the Soviet Union
Orphans building homes: Forgotten remnants of the Armenian deportations in South Jordan
Open Access
This multi-disciplinary volume is one of the few collections about social change covering various cases of mass violence and genocide. In life under persecution, social relations and social structures were not absent and not simply replaced by an ethno-racial order. The studies in this book show the influence of social structures like gender, age and class on life under persecution. Exploring practices in family and labor relations and of collective action, they counter claims of an atomization of society or total uprootedness of victims. Despite being exposed to poverty and want and under the permanent threat of political violence, persecuted people tried to develop their own agency. Case studies are about the Jewish and Armenian persecutions, Rwanda, the war of decolonization in Mozambique and civilian refuges in Belarus during World War II. The authors are a mix of experienced scholars and young researchers