Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Genocide And Memories Of The Armenian Diaspora In Argentina

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Genocide And Memories Of The Armenian Diaspora In Argentina

    GENOCIDE AND MEMORIES OF THE ARMENIAN DIASPORA IN ARGENTINA

    AZG DAILY
    2009-12-15 00:15:55 (GMT +04:00)

    Lucila G. Tossounian, Manoogian Simone Visiting Pre-Doctoral
    Researcher, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

    Many Armenians arrived in Argentina escaping from the Genocide at the
    beginning of the 20th century. The experiences of these survivors
    were transmitted orally from generation to generation. This way
    of transmission has an impact on the way the Armenian Genocide and
    history are perceived by Armenians in Argentina.

    Lucila Tossounian will present a summary of the work done by the
    "Armenian Genocide: Memories of the Diaspora" Research Group of the
    Oral History Program at the University of Buenos Aires. This is an
    interdisciplinary group established to create the first oral archive of
    testimonies of Armenian Genocide survivors in Argentina. The group's
    research focuses on the ways collective memory has been transmitted
    regarding the Genocide and analyzes the relations between the ways
    of transmission and how the Genocide is understood.

    Lucila Tossounian is currently a Visiting Pre-Doctoral Scholar in the
    Armenian Studies Program at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. She
    lives in Argentina, where is a Ph.D. candidate at the University
    of Buenos Aires (UBA) and Fellow Junior Researcher of Argentina's
    National Council for Scientific and Technological Research. She also
    works at the UBA's Anthropological Sciences Institute, focusing on
    the Armenian migrants that went to Argentina in the late 1990's. She
    is Co-Director of the Research Group on the Armenian Genocide: Ways of
    Transmission and Ways of Action at the Oral History Program of the UBA,
    which aims to create an archive of oral testimonies of survivors of
    the Armenian Genocide in Argentina. As an anthropologist, she has done
    fieldwork among Armenians in Buenos Aires since 1999. Her subjects
    of interest include ethnicity, nationalism, migration, diaspora,
    identity, and community building processes.

    Light refreshments will be served

    This lecture is cosponsored by the Armenian Research Center,
    University of Michigan-Dearborn and the Armenian Studies Program,
    University of Michigan.

    The University of Michigan-Dearborn is located north of Michigan
    Avenue, south of Ford Road, and west of the Southfield Freeway. The
    CASL Building is designated CB on the map on the right. Parking is
    available in front of the building (by the red X). At this time of the
    evening, parking is free. The easiest ways to enter the campus are
    to come via Michigan Avenue westbound (from the Southfield Freeway)
    to Evergreen north, and then either 1) turn at the first turnaround on
    Evergreen, enter the campus at the Fieldhouse (which sports a large
    white billboard), and then turn right into the parking lot; or 2)
    enter at the crossover after the first turnaround on Evergreen, which
    will take you into the campus "Central Entrance," then turn left on
    Richard Dr., and then left into the parking lot. Michigan Avenue is
    fully open to traffic now.
Working...
X