Why are some cases of genocide prominently remembered while others are ignored, hidden, or denied? In this collection, contributors approach the question from a variety of perspectives and case studies, including the suppression of discussion about indigenous populations in the Americas and Australia, the reasons why the genocide of the Armenians, Assyrians, and Greeks long remained out of sight, and the violence that was the precursor to and the aftermath of the Holocaust.
Alexander Hinton serves as the Director of the Center for the Study of Genocide and Human Rights and Professor in the Anthropology and Global Affairs Departments at Rutgers University, Newark.
Considering this is a book titled Hidden Genocides, there (ironically) are a few instances of genocide that escape discussion in this book. Mainly that of Japan during WW2 (although there are two brief, one sentence, mentions of it), and that of colonial rule of Belgium in the Congo in the late 19th and early 20th centuries (which is not mentioned at all). I hope to see perhaps a second volume of articles in a book similar to this one in which those genocides are given light. A small criticism I have, is that on the article discussing the genocide of Native Americans, the author actually perpetuates one of the rhetorical issues regarding a hidden genocide that other authors in this very book are arguing should be avoided. The author compares the number of indigenous peoples that died to the Jews in the holocaust, however, in only considering the 6 million Jewish dead, he ignores the 6 million others (Roma, Poles, POWs, Gays, etc.) that were murdered during the genocidal campaign of the Nazis, and thereby perpetuates the very line of thinking and subtle "hiding" that this book is intended to combat (ie, shed light on "hidden genocides", in this case the murder of millions of others which often goes unmentioned in discussions of the holocaust). For further discussion, another potential genocide could be discussed in a further volume regarding the Great Leap Forward, in which tens of millions of Chinese people died. This could be discussed in a similar book in the future to tease out the nuances of whether it did constitute genocide, and if it did, would it be a division between rural/urban people that was the main factor in deeming it genocide.