RT Review T1 Ararat and Collective Memories of the Armenian Genocide JF Holocaust and genocide studies VO 20 IS 2 SP 235 OP 255 A1 Markovitz, Jonathan LA English PB Oxford University Press YR 2006 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1814477403 AB Atom Egoyan’s Ararat (2002) has been misread and inappropriately critiqued as a failed cinematic representation of the Armenian genocide. The author of this article argues that the film is instead an ambitious meditation on the question of how to represent genocide in general, and the Armenian genocide specifically. He traces a number of themes in Ararat, including the political stakes involved in genocide commemoration, the reasons for and costs of denial, the difficulty and urgency of constructing a past when only ruins remain, the problematic nature of cinematic treatments of genocide, the intensely personal ways in which collective memory helps to shape individual and family identities, and the complexities of determining which versions of the past are reliable. K1 Rezension DO 10.1093/hgs/dcl003