LONG SHADOWS: THE GREAT WAR, AUSTRALIA AND THE MIDDLE EAST
DescriptionIn the Ottoman capital of Constantinople, on the evening before Anzac troops landed on the Gallipoli peninsula, hundreds of Armenians became the first victims of the Armenian Genocide. One century later, the legacies of these violent events continue to resonate.
Long Shadows: The Great War, Australia and the Middle East brings together past and recent histories to highlight lesser known aspects of the First World War in the Middle East. It examines the long shadows cast by this conflict, which reach well beyond Gallipoli and deep into present day experiences within the broader region.
With texts, film clips and evocative photographs, the exhibition leads the visitor from Australia to Gallipoli, Asia Minor and Northern Syria, from 1915 through to 2018.
To be officially opened by Vicken Babkenian, author of Armenia, Australia and the Great War, and independent researcher for the Australian Institute for the Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Sydney.
Developed by Dr Hans-Lukas Kieser - Associate Professor, School of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Newcastle and an Australian Research Council Future Fellow - in collaboration with Dr Kate Ariotti, PHD candidate Caroline Schneider, and the University Gallery.
LONG SHADOWS: THE GREAT WAR, AUSTRALIA AND THE MIDDLE EAST. The University Gallery, accessed 26/09/2023, https://gallery.newcastle.edu.au/nodes/view/3220