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NY ASA: April 29th Marc Nichanian

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  • NY ASA: April 29th Marc Nichanian

    New York Armenian Students' Association / ASA of USA
    333 Atlantic Avenue
    Warwick, RI 02888
    (401) 461-6114
    Contact person: Alec Gevorkyan
    [email protected]
    www.asainc.org

    http://www.asainc.org/common/events/ny_ianhokeeclubpresentprofessormarcnichanian_ 04042005.html

    For Immediate Release!
    April 4, 2005

    Contact: [email protected]

    WHAT: NY ASA and NYU Armenian Hokee Club present:
    Professor Marc Nichanian to discuss testimony in relation to Armenian
    literature

    "ART AS TESTIMONY"

    WHERE: New York University, Kimmel Center, Room 903
    60 Washington Square South, New York, NY

    WHEN: Friday, April 29, 2005, 7:00- 9:00 PM

    ADMISSION: Free

    Art as Testimony
    An Evening of Reflection with Literary Luminary,
    Professor Marc Nichanian

    Testimony as a literary objective has preoccupied Armenian literary efforts
    throughout most of the twentieth century and persists to challenge writers
    and literary critics alike. Yet, a thorough and comparative survey of
    testimonial narratives and experiences still remains lacking, partly from
    the sheer novelty of the concept. Testimony is a purpose or production
    distinct from chronicles, memoirs, protests, or depictions of terror.
    Recent works have attempted to identify just what differentiates and
    identifies testimony by tackling questions such as what does testimony
    testify for, an event or something else? Why do we collect testimonies, to
    compose memory? In the seeming effort to establish authenticity, what is it
    that becomes "authentic" through a testimonial document?

    According to leading Armenian literary authority, Professor Marc Nichanian,
    "The time has come to review the whole effort to bear witness, from literate
    (and sometimes literary) narratives published between 1919 and 1922, to
    survivors' memoirs published throughout Armenian literary journals, to
    narratives gathered in recent campaigns inspired by the methods of oral
    history, to testimonies written (or translated) into English." Professor
    Nichanian will share his invaluable perspectives about the problematic of
    testimony in an evening proudly organized by the NY Armenian Students'
    Association and the NYU Armenian Club on Friday, April 29 at NYU's Kimmel
    Center.

    Professor Nichanian will examine various examples of testimony, written by
    both Armenians and non-Armenians as he explains the questions outlined
    above. He will address an enduring crisis among Armenian writers who have
    attempted and regularly failed to write testimony as literature, as art.
    With references to Zabel Yesayan and Hagop Oshagan, he will also present a
    sampling of the body of writings, reflections, and literary experiences on
    the essence of testimony in the Armenian language.

    Professor Nichanian is currently guest-editing a volume of Armenian Review
    entitled Art and Testimony, which integrates a discussion of Atom Egoyan's
    film Ararat. He is simultaneously preparing a volume on Armenian Testimony
    in the Twentieth Century. He recently presented a similar paper at the UCLA
    International Conference, "After Nine Decades: the Enduring Legacy of the
    Armenian Genocide."

    * * *

    Marc Nichanian was born in Paris in 1946. He received his primary and
    secondary education in French schools and studied Armenian (both modern and
    classical) at the School of Oriental Languages. He studied Philosophy in
    Paris and Strasbourg as a student of Jean-Luc Nancy and Philippe
    Lacoue-Labarthe. He received his Ph.D. in Philosophy in 1979 for a thesis
    on the meaning of what philosophers and logicians call «founding» (in
    French, le fondement). He began writing in Armenian early on and has an
    extensive series of articles, essays, anthologies, and translations to his
    name. He has been published in literary reviews in Armenia as well as in
    the diaspora. After teaching Armenian literature first as an itinerant
    professor (in Jerusalem, Venice, Paris, Montreal, and Los Angeles), he
    lectured as visiting Professor of Armenian Language and Literature at UCLA
    (1995-1996) and held the Chair of Armenian Language and Civilization at
    Columbia University (1996-2004). He recently completed research as a
    scholar-in-residence at the Armenian Research Center at the University of
    Michigan, Dearborn

    Among his luminous accomplishments is Gam, Analytical Review, a five-volume
    literary journal, which he conceived, edited, and published alongside
    numerous personal contributions. Volume VI will appear in the spring of
    2005. He is also the author of Ages et usages de la langue arménienne (Ages
    and Usages of the Armenian Language, Paris, 1989), which provides an
    «institutional» history of Armenian; Bibliography of Hagop Oshagan (Los
    Angeles, 1999); the first volume of a series entitled Writers of Disaster;
    Armenian Literature in the Twentieth Century (London, 2002); and Yeghishe
    Charents, Poet of the Revolution (Costa Mesa, 2003). His translations
    include a book of poems by Zareh Khrakhouni, two books by Vahakn Dadrian
    about the Armenian Genocide, essays by Friedrich Nietzsche, Walter Benjamin,
    Ernst Jünger, Maurice Blanchot, Georges Bataille, and Jean-Luc Nancy. He
    recently translated (from French into Armenian) a significant treatise by
    Antoine Berman called The Experience of the Foreign on theories of
    translation and culture in German Romanticism. It will be published in the
    series Grakan Ughi (Yerevan).

    The ASA 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. Armenian Hokee (the NYU Armenian Club) regularly
    co-sponsors events with the NY ASA, making it possible to present free
    public events to students and the community alike.

    Admission is free. Donations are welcome and appreciated.

    For more information about the NY ASA, please visit www.asainc.org/newyork.

    For additional information about NYU Armenian Hokee Club, please visit
    www.nyu.edu/clubs/armenian.

    --Boundary_(ID_wRMkl2UY4F1rF3yMmABe1Q)--
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