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USC Discussion and Book Signing with Chronicler of Armenian Genocide

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  • USC Discussion and Book Signing with Chronicler of Armenian Genocide

    PRESS RELEASE
    USC's Information Services Division
    Doheny Memorial Library
    3550 Trousdale Parkway
    Los Angeles, CA 90089-0183
    Contact: Tyson Gaskill
    Tel: 213-740-2070
    Fax: 213-740-2448
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Web: http://www.usc.edu/isd/libraries

    Discussion and Book Signing with Chronicler of Armenian Genocide

    LOS ANGELES - The University of Southern California's Doheny Memorial
    Library will host a reception and book signing on Friday, November 12,
    at 11 a.m., with Peter Balakian, author of the recent bestselling book
    "The Burning Tigris." The reception, sponsored by the USC Institute of
    Armenian Studies and the USC Armenian Student Association, is free and
    open to the public.

    Balakian grew up in an affluent New Jersey suburb. His grandmother, who
    played a major role in his upbringing, often told him stories. Mixed
    among the familiar Mother Goose and Grimm yarns, however, were strange
    and often disturbing tales of her youth in Armenia - all cloaked in
    metaphor and symbolism.

    The mysteries from his family's past remained so until years later when
    Balakian finally pieced together their meaning. The terrible event that
    his grandmother had fallen victim to was the Ottoman Turk government's
    extermination of more than one million Armenians in 1915.

    Balakian has researched and written extensively about the atrocities
    that befell Armenians during World War I.

    The Burning Tigris gives a detailed history of the events - the first
    modern genocide of the 20th century - and recounts the vast outpouring
    of humanitarian feelings generated in America. The New York Times Book
    Review called the book a `fascinating and affecting memoir.'

    Balakian is the Donald M. and Constance H. Rebar Professor of the
    Humanities at Colgate University, where he teaches American literature,
    creative writing and a course on the Armenian genocide and the
    Holocaust. He is director of the university's new Center for the Study
    of Ethics and World Societies.

    Balakian has been awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship, the Anahit Literary
    Prize and the New Jersey Council for the Humanities Book Prize.

    The book signing and reception are held in conjunction with `They Shall
    Not Perish: Relief Efforts of the Near East Foundation, 1915-1930,' an
    exhibition that documents through photographs, letters, posters, books,
    and rare artifacts a relief effort for victims of the genocide.

    The exhibition continues in the ground floor rotunda of Doheny Library
    through Sunday, January 30, 2005; admission is free.
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