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British Historian Joins Armenian Studies At University of Michigan

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  • British Historian Joins Armenian Studies At University of Michigan

    University of Michigan
    Armenian Studies Program
    Gloria Caudill Administrator
    1080 S. University
    Ste., 2603 SSWB
    Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1106
    Tel: (734) 763-0622
    Fax: (734) 763-4918


    PRESS RELEASE
    Contact: Gloria Caudill, administrator
    [email protected]

    BRITISH HISTORIAN JOINS ARMENIAN STUDIES AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN

    Dr. Joanne Laycock, University of Manchester, has been designated the
    first Manoogian Simone Foundation Post-doctoral Fellow, announced Prof.
    Gerard Libaridian, Director of the Armenian Studies Program at the
    University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.

    Dr. Laycock's research in recent years has covered the British
    Armenophile movement and the British response to the Armenian Genocide,
    Armenian refugee relief post WWI, and also British travel literature on
    Armenia. She has highlighted Soviet Armenian History, especially with
    regards to the repatriation to Armenia and homeland-Diaspora relations.

    Dr. Joanne Laycock's doctoral dissertation was titled: Anglo-French
    Scholarship on Armenians in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth
    Centuries and the Response to the Armenian Genocide (2000-2001),
    University of Manchester, School of Arts, Histories and Cultures. Her
    article "Armenia: The 'Nationalization,' Internationalization and
    Representation of the Refugee Crisis," (co-authored with Peter Gatrell),
    was recently included in Nick Baron and Peter Gatrell, eds., Homelands:
    War, Population and Statehood in Eastern Europe and Russia, 1918-1924
    (Anthem Press, 2004), 179-200. Her forthcoming publications in 2008
    include Imagining Armenia: Orientalism, Ambiguity and Intervention
    1878-1925 (Manchester University Press) and "Repatriations in Post
    Second World War Armenia," in Peter Gatrell and Nick Baron, eds,
    Warlands: Population Resettlement and State Reconstruction in Soviet
    Eastern Europe, 1945-1950.

    Dr. Joanne Laycock's research while in Ann Arbor will address the
    cultural history of population displacement in modern Armenia, with
    particular reference to constructions of 'home/land.' Her work will
    highlight the various locations and contingent nature of 'homeland,' the
    complex experience of multiple displacements and return journeys and the
    centrality of landscape and material culture in articulating relations
    between homeland and diaspora.
    The position of Post-doctoral Fellow at the University of Michigan, Ann
    Arbor, has been made possible by the recent gift from the Manoogian
    Simone Foundation to the University's Armenian Studies Program. Dr.
    Laycock will deliver a number of lectures to the University and larger
    communities during her stay, January through June 2008.
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