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Armenian Feminism and Nationalism

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  • Armenian Feminism and Nationalism

    PRESS RELEASE
    ARMENIAN INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION
    65 Main St., #3A
    Watertown, MA 02472
    March 26, 2007
    CONTACT: Barbara Merguerian
    Tel: 617-926-0171
    E-mail: [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])
    Net: _www.aiwa-net.org_ (http://www.aiwa-net.org)

    Women's History Program Will Explore
    Armenian Feminism and Nationalism

    In its annual observance of Women's History Month, the Armenian
    International Women's Association (AIWA) this year is sponsoring a
    program dealing with the tremendous challenges that faced the Armenian
    nation in the immediate post-genocide period.

    `Can Feminism Survive a Nation? Armenian Women Intellectuals and Their
    Discourses in 1920s Istanbul' is the theme of the presentation, which
    will take place on Sunday, April 1, at 3 p.m. at the Armenian Cultural
    Foundation in Arlington, MA.

    The program will explore the gendered after-effects of the Armenian
    Genocide on the ways prominent Armenian intellectuals of Istanbul
    understood their community's past, present, and future. With a focus
    on the Armenianwomen's journal Hay Gin (Armenian Woman), published in
    Istanbul from 1919 to 1933, the talk will explain how the theme of
    `Armenian motherhood' was employed to enable a uniquely post-1915
    Armenian feminism in Turkey.

    The topic will be presented by a young, Turkish-born Armenian scholar,
    Lerna Ekmekcioglu, doctoral candidate in History and Middle Eastern
    Studies at New York University. The working title of her dissertation
    is `Feminists and Nationkeeping: Armenians of Istanbul in the Late
    Ottoman and Early Republican Turkey. ' A graduate of Bogazici
    University in Istanbul with a major in Sociology, Ekmekcioglu has
    published several articles and made various paper presentations.

    She recently co-edited a volume about Turkish-Armenian female
    intellectualsof the past century, titled A Cry for Justice: Five
    Armenian Feminist Writers from the Ottoman Empire to the Turkish
    Republic (1862-1944), in Turkish. Atthe Middle East Studies
    Association meeting in Boston last fall, she participated in a panel
    on `Identity and Narrative in the Armenian Press.'

    The recent assassination of the Turkish-Armenian editor Hrant Dink in
    Istanbul has thrown a spotlight on the Armenian community of
    Turkey. At thesame time it has revealed how little is known about that
    community, its institutions, its struggles and contradictions, and its
    recent hisory. AIWA's program will offer insights into the community
    in general, and specifically in the role of women.

    The public is cordially invited to attend.

    AIWA was established in 1991 as an independent, non-profit,
    non-sectarian organization designed to advance the visibility of
    Armenian women. Open to all who share its goals, AIWA has organized
    four international conferences, supported health, educational, and
    social programs in Armenia, planned numerous lectures, workshops, and
    programs dealing with issues of concern to Armenian women, instituted
    a scholarship program, published several books, and established a
    network of Armenian women.

    Further information about AIWA and the April 1 Women's History Month
    program is available by contacting the association at 65 Main St.,
    Watertown, MA; telephone: 617/926-0171; e-mail: [email protected]_
    (mailto:[email protected]); web: www.Aiwa-net.org.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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