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Author Explores Human Nature, Armenian Genocide Through Fiction Writ

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  • Author Explores Human Nature, Armenian Genocide Through Fiction Writ

    AUTHOR EXPLORES HUMAN NATURE, ARMENIAN GENOCIDE THROUGH FICTION WRITING

    The University of Wisconsin (Madison)
    4/19/2005

    CONTACT: Judith Claire Mitchell
    PHONE: (608) 263-3773
    EMAIL: [email protected]

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    MADISON - A fat packet of letters, written by a friend's great-aunt
    during World War I, inspired Judith Claire Mitchell, assistant professor
    of English at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, to write "The Last
    Day of the War" (Pantheon Books, 2004), her first novel. To Mitchell,
    those letters exemplified a key aspect of human nature; fiction, she
    thought, would be an ideal medium to explore it.

    "Clearly the aunt had gone to France in 1919 as a YMCA Girl because that
    was where the boys were, but every now and then the frivolous tone was
    interrupted by a startling description of war-ravaged France," Mitchell
    says. "In one letter, a single sentence about an encounter with an
    Armenian rug merchant who lost his entire family in the genocide (in
    1915-16) caught my attention, particularly because the very next
    sentence was all about a dance that the aunt had attended. I was
    reminded of the way we can come face to face with unfathomable human
    suffering, acknowledge it for a moment and then fix our hair and dance
    the night away. I was struck by how human this kind of behavior is, and
    I wanted to see if I could create a character that embodied it."

    That character is Yale White, who goes to France hoping to "run into"
    the Armenian-American soldier she lusts after. She finds him, and
    through him becomes enmeshed in the covert organization he belongs to
    (based on the factual Operation Nemesis) whose members are intent on
    violently avenging the genocide.

    Mitchell adds that one surprising offshoot of the novel has been the
    flurry of invitations to speak about the Armenian atrocity. This past
    month, for example, she spoke to Rhode Island high school educators
    interested in using literature to teach about genocide. She also was the
    first novelist invited to lecture at the Armenian Library and Museum in
    Watertown, Mass.

    Still denied by many Turks, the massacre of 1915-16 accounted for the
    deaths of up to 1.5 million Armenians in the Ottoman Empire. Early in
    1915, Armenians in the army were disarmed, placed into labor battalion
    and finally killed. In April, intellectual and political leaders were
    rounded up and murdered. Remaining Armenians were arrested in their
    houses. Many were shot immediately. Others were told they would be
    relocated, and ultimately were: To the concentration camps of Jerablus
    and Deir ez-Zor.

    However, Mitchell says that current events also had their hand in
    shaping the book.

    "While I was researching the Armenian genocide, similar slaughters were
    taking place in Bosnia and Rwanda. So, in addition to writing about the
    human condition, I wanted to call readers' attention to the first
    genocide of the 20th century while commenting indirectly on the
    century's final genocides," she says.

    Mitchell is on leave to work on her second novel, again a historical
    exploration of ethnic identity. This fall she will be teaching two
    graduate-level courses, a pedagogy class and a fiction workshop for
    students in the English department's relatively new Master of Fine Arts
    program. She says that being a writer herself gives her a great deal in
    common with her students.

    "It's critical that teachers of creative writing courses be writers who
    have struggled with the writing process," she says. "You need someone
    who realizes how hard it is to write."

    Mitchell will read from "The Last Day of the War" at the Armenian
    National Committee of Wisconsin's commemoration of the 90th anniversary
    of the Armenian genocide. The event will be held at 10:30 a.m. on
    Saturday, April 26, in the State Capitol. For more information on that
    event, contact Zohrab Khaligian at [email protected].

    ###

    Barbara Wolff, (608) 262-8292, [email protected]

    University Communications
    News@UW-Madison
    News Releases

    http://www.news.wisc.edu/11068.html
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