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Russell Lectures About Armenian-Slavic Folklore Connections Thursday

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  • Russell Lectures About Armenian-Slavic Folklore Connections Thursday

    RUSSELL LECTURES ABOUT ARMENIAN-SLAVIC FOLKLORE CONNECTIONS THURSDAY

    Belmont Citizen-Herald
    http://www.wickedlocal.com/belmont/ fun/entertainment/books/x802009282/Russell-lecture s-about-Armenian-Slavic-folklore-connections-Thurs day
    Sept 9 2008
    MA

    Prof. James R. Russell, Mashtots Professor of Armenian Studies at
    Harvard University, will give the first lecture of NAASR's fall
    2008 series on Thursday, Sept. 11, at the National Association for
    Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR) Center, 395 Concord Ave. in
    Belmont. Prof. Russell's lecture will be entitled "The Rime of the
    Book of the Dove: Zoroastrian Cosmology, Armenian Heresiology, and
    the Russian Novel." The lecture will be a "Roman Jakobson Memorial
    Lecture" in honor of the pioneering linguist, Slavicist, folklorist,
    and one of the intellectual giants of the 20th century, NAASR Founding
    Member Prof. Roman Jakobson (1896-1982).

    The spiritual ballad or poem, or Coleridgean "rime," the "Book of
    the Dove" (Rus. Golubinaia kniga, Stikh o golubinoi knige) exists in
    a number of transcribed oral variants, most of which were collected
    in northern and northwestern Russia -- emanating most likely from
    the region of Great Novgorod. The poem relates the deep secrets,
    that is, the ones that concern cosmology. It has been called the
    "pearl of the Russian mythological epic."

    Russian Text with Armenian and Iranian Sources Many aspects of the
    "Book of the Dove" suggest an Iranian source, and in the Byzantine
    period the route of transmission would have been Armenia, most likely
    via oral teachings transmitted by itinerant preachers and minstrels,
    of the adherents of heterodox sects that flourished in Armenia at
    that time.

    In this lecture, Prof. Russell will take a subterranean (and, at
    times, submarine) journey through the dark world of medieval Russian
    folklore and Armenian and Iranian religion and spirituality, with
    detours through the visionary poetry of Grigor Narekatsi and the
    groundbreaking novels of Vladimir Nabokov.

    Prof. James R. Russell has been the Mashtots Professor of Armenian
    Studies at Harvard University since 1992. His books include "Bosphorus
    Nights: The Complete Lyric Poems of Bedros Tourian," "Armenian and
    Iranian Studies," "The Book of Flowers, An Armenian Epic: The Heroes
    of Kasht, Zoroastrianism in Armenia," and "Hovhannes Tlkurantsi and
    the Medieval Armenian Lyric Tradition."

    Tribute to Roman Jakobson, a NAASR Founding Member With Prof. Russell's
    lecture -- one of numerous examples of his explorations of Armenian
    and Slavic linguistic, cultural, and literary connections -- comes
    an opportunity to pay tribute to a predecessor at Harvard who looked
    at similar issues. Roman Jakobson is considered the father of modern
    structural linguistics, the founder of phonology, and one of the
    leading Slavi-cists of his time. A founder of the pre-revolution Moscow
    Linguistic Circle and later the famed Prague School of Linguistics,
    his work has been a profound influence on all who have followed him,
    including Claude Levi-Strauss, Roland Barthes, Paul Ricoeur, Gilles
    Deleuze, and Jacques Lacan.

    Among Jakobson's interests, albeit not one for which he is well known,
    was medieval Armenian literature and Armenian folklore. Jakobson
    received his bachelor's degree at the Lazarev Institute of Oriental
    Languages in Moscow (established in the early 19th century by the
    Armenian Lazarev/Lazarian family), where he learned Armenian and
    became interested in Armenian affairs.

    Jakobson was the Samuel Hazzard Cross Professor of Slavic Languages
    and Literatures at Harvard when NAASR was developing in the 1950s
    and NAASR Chairman Emeritus Manoog S. Young recalls meeting Jakobson
    through Prof. Richard N. Frye, also a NAASR founding member. He took a
    keen interest in NAASR's early development and the growth of Armenian
    Studies and participated in the first ever NAASR symposium in June
    1955 on "Armenian Studies and Research -- Problems and Needs." He also
    spoke at NAASR's second anniversary symposium in 1957, giving a talk
    on "The Importance of Ancient and Medieval Armenian Liter-ature." In
    1964, Prof. Jakobson gave a NAASR-sponsored lecture at Harvard on
    "Slavic and Armenian Questions in the Middle Ages."

    Admission to the event is free (donations appreciated). The NAASR
    Center is located opposite the First Armenian Church and next to the
    U.S. Post Office. Ample parking is available around the building and
    in adjacent areas. The lecture will begin promptly at 8:00 p.m.

    More information about the lecture is available by calling
    617-489-1610, faxing 617-484-1759, e-mailing [email protected], or writing
    to NAASR, 395 Concord Ave., Belmont, MA 02478.
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