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Toronto Seminar on Indigeneities and Cosmopolitanisms

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  • Toronto Seminar on Indigeneities and Cosmopolitanisms

    PRESS RELEASE
    Sociology-Anthropology and
    Simone de Beauvoir Institute
    Concordia University
    Contact: Sima Aprahamian, Ph.D.
    1455 de Maisonneuve W.
    Montreal (Quebec)
    H3G 1M8

    A Session that may be of interest to Armenians

    Toronto, May 8-12, 2007 the American Ethnology
    & Canadian Anthropology Society are having joint meetings at University of
    Toronto.
    The theme is "Indigeneities and Cosmopolitanisms".
    http://www.casca-aes2007.a nthropologica.ca/


    The session entitled "Words that trigger fear and representations of fear"
    brings together papers that are based on research among survivors of
    atrocities, genocide, mass murder, and extreme
    violence through an examination of verbal and non-verbal triggers of
    memory that incite fear. The panel also has papers that examine
    representations of fear in survivor memoirs.

    While Victoria Rowe (Chuo University, Japan) will examine the consequences
    of State generated fear through a focus of 1915, and the experience of the
    Armenian people during the Genocide as it is represented in survivor
    accounts, Sima Aprahamian (Concordia University) will examine expressions
    of fear in Linda Ghan's novel Sosi. Sosi, the young woman at the centre of
    Linda Ghan's novel speaking about Armenians living in Turkey after the
    Genocide states:"They were a frightened, Mediterranean people. The
    remnants of terror. I hated them for their fear. I hated them for my
    fear"(Ghan 2005: 134) & yearns to be with people who have never known
    fear.

    The other papers in this panel include Diane George's (Carleton
    University) discussion of Coetzee's Holocaust novel Disgrace which
    portrays the complexity of species relations between humans and dogs, and
    Karin Doerr's (Concordia University) paper which will explore fear induced
    by language memories. The paper will examine how certain German words,
    used during the Nazi period as part of the genocidal
    vocabulary, have remained etched in the memory of survivors. Thus, a word
    can conjure up traumatic, life-treating events that the individuals
    experienced in the past.


    The session takes place on May 9, 2007
    9 AM
    FA3 - Panel 5
    Session organizer and chair: Sima Aprahamian, Ph.D. (Concordia
    University)

    At the University of Toronto, Toronto

    The session is part of the international symposium on "Fear" which is
    taking place during the
    joint conference of the Canadian Anthropology Society (CASCA) and
    the American Ethnographic Society (AES), hosted by the Department of
    Anthropology at the University of Toronto, May 8-12, 2007

    http://www.casca-aes2007.anthropologica.ca/S ession%20Schedule--Sorted%20by%20Day%20and%20Time. pdf

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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