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NY ASA: Professor Marc Nichanian: ART AND TESTIMONY

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  • NY ASA: Professor Marc Nichanian: ART AND TESTIMONY

    New York Armenian Students' Association
    333 Atlantic Avenue
    Warwick, RI 02888
    (401) 461-6114
    [email protected]

    PRESS RELEASE

    May 16, 2005

    Contact: New York ASA: [email protected]


    NY ASA and the NYU Hokee Club Host Lecture on Art and Testimony With
    Professor Marc Nichanian

    by Anahid Ugurlyan, Nanor Kenderian and Alec Gevorkyan

    As ceremonies of mourning and remembrance for the 90th Anniversary of
    the Armenian Genocide were coming to a close, Armenians in New York and
    New Jersey gathered on Friday, April 29 for an evening of contemplation
    with Professor Marc Nichanian at New York University's Kimmel Center.
    In a lecture entitled "Art and Testimony," Professor Marc Nichanian,
    (Associate Professor of Armenian Language and Civilization at Columbia
    University, 1996 - 2005), delivered an insightful presentation about
    the relationship between testimony and literature. After a brief
    introduction by Nanor Kenderian of the New York Armenian Students'
    Association, Professor Nichanian discussed the definition of testimony
    (from the Latin "to witness") in its truest sense, meaning "bearing
    witness" to one's own death, an account that perishes alongside the
    witness or the victim himself. Thus, the "testimony" of genocide
    (or Catastrophe) survivors is not testimony in its true sense
    (bearing witness to one's death) but rather the recounting of the
    deaths of others as well as one's own struggle to survive. As such,
    these testimonies also serve as oral history.

    Professor Nichanian addressed the use of testimony as a means to
    elicit political gains by bringing accounts as evidence to prove the
    perpetration of the Armenian Genocide. He also discussed testimonies'
    representation as literature or art. In both instances - political
    or aesthetic - he found the treatment of testimonies problematic.
    He explained that when testimonies are treated as a means to a
    political end, they undergo a perversion, whereby the testimony
    loses all intrinsic value by becoming an object for demonstration.
    The individual survivor's voice, life, and story lose their integrity
    and uniqueness when subjected to an overarching political enterprise,
    in which one story is merely another instance in many, one life
    indistinguishable from the next. Survivors recounted their experiences
    not to prove the existence of the Genocide, for at the time they felt
    no need to prove something that was clearly only too real to them.
    The need to recount was predominantly a complex psychological
    drive to affirm memories and process trauma, among other factors.
    Treating these memories and stories solely to combat Genocide denial
    instead of studying them in the context of the cultural, psychological,
    and social Catastrophe resulting from the event is to undermine the
    dignity and individuality of each life.

    In terms of art as a means to present testimony, Professor Nichanian
    maintained that Armenian writers have, in large part, failed to
    write testimony as literature, although he named one instance of
    success in this endeavor as Zabel Yesayan's Among the Ruins, which
    does not recount the 1915 atrocities, but instead the preceding
    massacre in Cilicia. Professor Nichanian contended that the actual
    testimonies of survivors should be examined as art or literature
    in themselves, with attention to tone, style, content and context.
    Professor Nichanian also discussed continued efforts of Armenian
    institutions and publishers, including the Zoryan Institute and
    the Gomidas Institute, to collect and publish testimonies, namely
    memoirs of survivors. He considers these efforts as valuable but only
    marginal projects, because the collection of genocide narratives and
    memoirs is a very recent undertaking. According to the Professor,
    a dynamic and organized effort is necessary to reveal, present,
    and study witness testimonies.

    An engaging question and answer session followed Professor Nichanian's
    presentation, addressing many issues including Turkey's continued
    denial and the necessity to use "testimony" to "authenticate" the
    Genocide's occurrence until it is politically recognized. One audience
    member also mentioned a recent emergence of testimonies from Turks
    who have discovered their Armenian genealogy or from Kurds who have
    begun writing about their predecessors' accounts of witnessing both
    Kurdish and Turkish perpetrations.

    The event was an extraordinary success and was fully attended both
    by active ASA members and quite a few new attendees, both Armenian
    and non-Armenian. The ASA is thankful to the NYU Armenian Hokee Club
    for their assistance with planning and organizing the lecture.

    The Armenian Students' Association is a nationwide membership
    organization that promotes Armenian culture and education by providing
    Armenian communities with social, academic, and educational events.
    All funds raised by the regional branches contribute to the ASA's
    scholarship fund for Armenian students studying in the United States.

    For more information about the NY ASA, please visit
    http://www.asainc.org
    From: Baghdasarian
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