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ARPA Lecture 12/11/2008

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  • ARPA Lecture 12/11/2008

    ARPA INSTITUTE
    18106 Miranda St., Tarzana CA 91356
    Phone/Fax (818) 881-0010
    Presents: Lecture/Seminar
    Subject: "Whitewashed, `Whiteness' in American History, with a special
    focus on Middle-Easterners"
    By: John Tehranian
    Thursday December 11, 2008 at 7:30 p.m.
    Merdinian Auditorium, 13330 Riverside Dr, Sherman Oaks, CA 91423
    Directions: On the 101 FY Exit on Woodman, Go North and Turn Right on
    Riverside Dr.
    Abstract: Throughout American history, racial classifications have
    wielded exceptional influence. For example, until 1952, federal law
    provided naturalization rights only to individuals who were white or
    black, but nothing `in-between.' During the late nineteenth and early
    twentieth centuries, a wave of new immigration from non-Anglo-Saxon
    countries arrived on our shores. As a result, the American legal
    system was forced to confront the task of defining what or who
    constituted the white race for the purposes of naturalization.
    Litigation over the concept of whiteness resulted, yielding
    life-altering consequences. While the trials often grew senseless,
    with judges delving into the depths of antiquity, reconstructing
    history, and spouting rigid ideologies in order to justify their
    rulings, the reification of whiteness had a profound impact on shaping
    the immigrant experience in the United States.
    Armenians played a central role in these cases. And the Armenian
    struggle for naturalization rights and `white' recognition is critical
    to understanding the processes at play in the social construction of
    race. By drawing upon these cases, Tehranian's talk assesses the
    historical and contemporary relevance of whiteness in American
    society, with a particular eye towards the war on terrorism and the
    debate over immigration, assimilation, and our national identity,
    especially after 9/11. Specifically, he discusses the peculiar
    problems of race that continue to plague us and how they affect
    Armenian and Middle-Eastern Americans. He also addresses the unusual
    Catch-22 facing Middle-Eastern Americans: Although considered white by
    law, and therefore ineligible for any policies benefiting minorities,
    they have faced rising degrees of discrimination over time'a fact
    highlighted by recent targeted immigration policies, racial profiling,
    a war on terrorism with a decided racialist bent, and growing rates of
    job discrimination and hate crime.
    John Tehranian is a Professor of Law and Director of the Entertainment
    Law Program at Chapman University School of Law. He has previously
    served as Professor of Law at the University of Utah, S.J. Quinney
    College of Law, and as Visiting Professor of Law at Loyola Law
    School. A graduate of Harvard University and Yale Law School, he is
    the author of numerous works on race, civil rights, and constitutional
    law. A frequent commentator on legal issues for the broadcast and
    print media, Tehranian has appeared on such television programs as
    ABC's Nightline and has been quoted as an expert on legal issues in
    such publications as The New York Times, Harper's Magazine, Financial
    Times, Los Angeles Times, Hollywood Reporter and Christian Science
    Monitor. He has also served as an expert witness in numerous
    intellectual property and civil rights infringement suits and is an
    experienced entertainment and intellectual property litigator, having
    represented prominent Hollywood, publishing, new media and technology
    clients at O'Melveny & Myers LLP and Turner Green Afrasiabi & Arledge
    LLP.
    Tehranian's scholarship focuses on the interface between law and
    culture, with a particular focus on issues of intellectual property,
    entertainment and race. He is the author of the book Whitewashed:
    America's Invisible Middle Eastern Minority (New York University
    Press, 2008), an analysis of the social and legal construction of race
    and the malleable concept of whiteness through history, and the
    forthcoming book Infringement Nation (2010), an examination of
    copyright pervasiveness and reform in the digital age.
    For information, please call Dr. Hagop Panossian at (818) 881-0010 or
    e-mail at [email protected] or [email protected].
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