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Clark U's Akcam to deliver lecture March 19 on the Armenian Genocide

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  • Clark U's Akcam to deliver lecture March 19 on the Armenian Genocide

    PRESS RELEASE
    Clark University
    Angela M. Bazydlo
    Associate Director of Media Relations
    Marketing and Communications
    ph: 508-793-7635
    cell: 508-365-8736


    March 5, 2009

    Clark University's Taner Akçam to deliver lecture March 19 on the
    Armenian Genocide, questions of national security

    WORCESTER, Mass.-Clark University's newly appointed Kaloosdian/Mugar
    Professor of Armenian Genocide Studies and Modern Armenian History,
    Taner Akçam, will deliver "Facing History: A Threat to National
    Security? The Relationship Between Turkish and American National
    Security Concepts and the Armenian Genocide" at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday,
    March 19, in Tilton Hall, 2nd floor
    of the Higgins University Center, 950 Main Street, Worcester.
    Historian Taner Akçam (pronounced ACH-jahm) is widely recognized as
    one of the first Turkish scholars to write extensively and
    authoritatively on the Turkish genocide of the Armenians in the early
    20th century, and notes that, when confronted with Turkish history,
    especially the Armenian Genocide, many people in Turkey grow prickly.
    Why are demands from inside and outside the country that Turkey come
    to terms with its past so vehemently rejected? Why is facing history
    seen as a threat to national security? Professor Akçam will explore
    these questions at the lecture and contextualize the Armenian Genocide
    issue within current debates over human rights and national security,
    arguing for a solution that integrates pragmatism with values.
    Professor Akçam grew up in Turkey, where he was imprisoned for
    his participation in and fervent support for free press
    publications. Following a dramatic escape, he later received political
    asylum in Germany, where he earned a Ph.D. from the University of
    Hannover and worked with the Hamburg Institute for Social Research. In
    2007, the Armenian Bar Association presented the Hrant Dink Freedom
    Award to Professor Akçam as "a champion of historical truth about the
    Armenian Genocide and for his courageous defense of liberty and free
    speech." Akçam's life and work have been featured in four critically
    acclaimed documentary films, and he is the author of 10 scholarly
    works, as well as numerous articles. His most recent book, "A Shameful
    Act: The Armenian Genocide and the Question of Turkish
    Responsibility," (Metropolitan Books), was released in 2006.
    The event is free and open to the public. It will be followed
    by a reception. For more information, call 508-793-8897. Clark
    University is a private, co-educational liberal-arts research
    university with 2,200 undergraduate and 800 graduate students. Since
    its founding in 1887 as the first all-graduate school in the United
    States, Clark has challenged convention with innovative programs such
    as the International Studies Stream, the Innovation & Entrepreneurship
    Program, and the accelerated BA/MA programs with the fifth year
    tuition-free for eligible students. The University is featured in
    Loren Pope's book, "Colleges That Change Lives."
    -www.clarku.edu-
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