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Rubina Peroomian at Ararat-Eskijian: Armenian Genocide in Literature

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  • Rubina Peroomian at Ararat-Eskijian: Armenian Genocide in Literature

    PRESS RELEASE
    Ararat-Eskijian Museum
    15105 Mission Hills Rd
    Mission Hills CA, 91345
    Email: [email protected]
    Tel: 818-838-4862

    RUBINA PEROOMIAN TO SPEAK AT ARARAT-ESKIJIAN
    THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IN LITERATURE


    Dr. Rubina Peroomian will give a lecture entitled "The Armenian Genocide in
    Literature: Perceptions of Those Who Lived Through the Years of Calamity" on
    Sunday, January 13, 2013, at 4:00 p.m. at the Ararat-Eskijian Museum, Hasmik
    Mgrdichian Gallery, 15105 Mission Hills Road, Mission Hills, CA. The
    lecture, based on Dr. Peroomian's most recent book, is sponsored by the
    Ararat-Eskijian Museum and the National Association for Armenian Studies and
    Research (NAASR). There will be a reception and book signing to follow the
    lecture.

    The Armenian Genocide that took place almost a century ago is now sliding
    into the past, but justice has not been rendered. Obsession with the past
    fueled by denial of the crime, the deniers' distortion of history, and the
    image of a lost homeland that kindles a sense of deprivation are hallmarks
    of the literature produced in the Armenian Diaspora.

    Dr. Rubina Peroomian's present volume begins with the response of the
    first-generation writers who survived, complementing her work Literary
    Responses to Catastrophe (1993) and demonstrating more emphatically the
    depth of the initial psychological shock of the traumatic experience as well
    as the soul-consuming struggle in dispersion. It then proceeds to discuss
    the literary response of the orphan generation, anapati serund, in its
    diversity and complexity and as a stark departure from the worldviews and
    literary traditions of the past with, nevertheless, the Genocide at its
    core. The final chapter is devoted to the memoirs of the aging survivors,
    ordinary men and women who, without a claim to artistry but with an urge to
    record their harrowing past experiences for posterity, have put their
    personal stories in writing.

    Dr. Rubina Peroomian holds a Ph.D. in Near Eastern Languages and Cultures
    from UCLA. She has taught Armenian studies courses, lectured widely,
    participated in international symposia, authored books, and contributed
    chapters to scholarly volumes.

    For more information contact the Ararat-Eskijian Museum at 818-838-4862 or

    [email protected] or NAASR at 617-489-1610 or [email protected].

    # # #

    December 27, 2012

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