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  • Armenian/Turkish Workshop Press release

    PRESS RELEASE/FOR IMMEDIATE DISTRIBUTION/PRESS RELEASE

    For more information write to:
    Email: [email protected]
    Prof. Gerard Libaridian
    Department of History
    University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

    FIFTH MEETING OF THE WORKSHOP FOR ARMENIAN/TURKISH SCHOLARSHIP TO
    CONVENE AT NYU

    Public Session Scheduled for Sunday, May 14

    The next meeting of the Workshop for Armenian/Turkish Scholarship
    (WATS) will convene at New York University, May 14-16. This will be the
    fifth meeting of this important undertaking. The three day gathering
    will start with a session open to the public, from 7:00-9:00 PM in
    the Hemmerdinger Hall, Silver Center, 100 Washington Square East,
    1st Floor.

    Organized by Professors Fatma Muge Gocek (Sociology, University of
    Michigan), Gerard Libaridian (History, Michigan), and Ronald Grigor
    Suny (History, Michigan), previous meetings of WATS were held at
    the University of Chicago (2000), University of Michigan (2002),
    the University of Minnesota (2004) and in Salzburg, Austria last
    year. The fifth meeting is being hosted by New York University and
    the organizers are joined by Prof.

    Paul Boghossian ( Philosophy, NYU). The theme of the workshop
    this year is "The Boundaries of Genocide: Intentions, Histories,
    Peoples." "Dialogue is an ideal that often ends up with one side
    talking and the other appearing to listen," commented Prof. Ronald
    Suny. "In discussions about the Armenian Genocide of 1915, neither
    side - Armenian or Turkish - seemed to understand, or even hear,
    what the other was saying.

    How could the deportation and massacre of hundreds of thousands of
    people be metastasized into a civil war that never occurred? How could
    one blame the victims for their own deaths? This workshop has been one
    of the most exciting and productive scholarly initiatives in the last
    five years that has brought Turkish, Armenian, and other historians
    and social scientists together to present research and talk about the
    fate of the Armenians and other minorities in the last years of the
    Ottoman Empire." The evening session on May 14 will serve to acquaint
    the general public with the work of this initiative. In addition to
    introductory comments by Prof. Boghossian and officials of the host
    institution, Professors Gocek, Suny and Libaridian will present reports
    on various aspects of WATS and answer questions. The public is invited.
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