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`   Cultural Survival After Forced Displacement: A Comparative Study of Cajun and Armenian Communities Forced displacement is often intended not merely to remove a population from a territory, but to dissolve its cultural continuity. Yet history offers striking examples of communities that survived—and even flourished—after exile, expulsion, or genocide. The Cajun and Armenian peoples represent two such cases. Though separated by geography, time, and the severity of violence inflicted upon them, both communities demonstrate how culture can endure through adaptation, memory, and communal transmission. A comparison of Cajun and Armenian survival reveals that while the mechanisms of preservation differed, the underlying sources of resilience—family, language, religion, food, and art—were remarkably similar.¹ Historical Contexts of Displacement The Cajun people descend from the Acadians, French settlers expelled by British authorities from present-day Atlantic Canada during the Fren...
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  Armenian Fishermen at Kumkapı by Ara Güler *** Here’s a detailed review of the book Armenian Fishermen at Kumkapı , by Ara Güler, covering its background, content, strengths, weaknesses, and what makes it of interest. *** 1. Background & Context The book reproduces a photo-journalistic series Güler published in the Armenian-language newspaper Jamanak from 21–26 May 1952. ( NAASR ) At the time Güler was 24 years old, and this project marked a significant early milestone in his career — helping establish his reputation in photo-journalism. ( Daily Sabah ) The subject matter is the fishermen community (specifically Armenian fishermen) of the Kumkapı district of Istanbul, during a period just prior to major urban changes (the coastal road / “Sahil Yolu” etc) that transformed the area. The book is trilingual (Turkish, English, Armenian) and includes both the original text and translations; plus archival photographs (56 total) beyond the original 12 published in th...
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  *** In "Carbon: The Book of Life" by Paul Hawken, re-frames the way we think about carbon: not simply as the villain behind climate change, but as an essential element of life, deeply woven into everything alive on Earth. *** "Carbon: The Book of Life" by Paul Hawken Hawken takes a panoramic view, tracing carbon from cosmic origins through ecosystems, organisms, soils, plants, human culture, fungi, food systems, etc. PublishersWeekly.com +2 PenguinRandomhouse.com +2 The book is part science, part philosophy and part environmental/cultural critique. It seeks to shift our relationship with nature and our understanding of our role in the living world. Atmos +1 Key Themes & Arguments Carbon as Life-giver, Not Just Pollutant Hawken emphasizes that carbon is foundational: it's in every living being, every cell; it cycles through soil, air, oceans, plants, humans. While we typically blame carbon (in forms like CO₂) for climate change, that’s only...
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  In Praise of Floods, James C. Scott’s *** James C. Scott’s In Praise of Floods is a nature/environmental non-fiction work that frames how we think about rivers and floods — not simply as hazards or resources, but as living, dynamic systems.   *** Key Themes & Arguments Rivers as living systems Scott argues that rivers are more than channels for water flow; they are full, complex ecosystems with floodplains, tributaries, wetlands, backwaters, eddies, and seasonal marshlands. These parts all contribute to the river’s vitality. Kirkus Reviews +3 Shakespeare and Company +3 NHBS +3 The importance of the “flood pulse” One central concept is the flood pulse — the annual flooding-event when the river spills into its floodplain. It’s during this event that so much of the river’s ecological productivity happens: nutrient renewal, habitat creation, supporting biodiversity. mitpressbookstore +3 Kirkus Reviews +3 Shakespeare and Company +3 Human engineering & cont...