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  • Zoryan Institute Awards 2nd and 3rd Ph.D. Scholarships to Address Sh

    ZORYAN INSTITUTE OF CANADA, INC.
    255 Duncan Mill Rd., Suite 310
    Toronto, ON, Canada M3B 3H9
    Tel: 416-250-9807 Fax: 416-512-1736 E-mail: [email protected]
    www.zoryaninstitute.org

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    CONTACT: George Shirinian

    DATE: July 17, 2006
    Tel: 416-250-9807

    Zoryan Institute Awards 2nd and 3rd Ph.D. Scholarships to Address
    Shortage of Genocide Scholars

    The Board of Directors of the Zoryan Institute is pleased to announce
    the winner of its Ph.D. Scholarship Award for year 2006. The committee
    unanimously chose Ms. Talar Chahinian-Mahroukian, who is studying
    Comparative Literature at the University of California, Los Angeles.

    Her Ph.D. thesis, titled "Silent Tremors: Aftermath Experience in
    French-Armenian Literature," analyzes the published works of the group
    of Armenian writers in France who initiated the literary movement
    called Menk.

    As part of her study, Chahinian-Mahroukian applies trauma theory to
    interpret this post-genocide literary discourse. She has presented
    papers on this subject at three academic conferences, both local
    and international.

    One of her professors described her as ".one of the most talented
    students I've had the good fortune to work with since I came to
    UCLA." This award will enable her to complete her research of journals
    and periodicals published in Paris between the two world wars, which
    are found in the Mekhitarist Special Collection in Vienna.

    "I would like to express my deepest gratitude for being selected as
    this year's recipient of the 2006 Zoryan Institute Ph.D. Scholarship,"
    Chahinian-Mahroukian stated. "I feel extremely humbled and honored to
    be a part of the institute and to join its tier of doctoral students
    working to enhance scholarship on the Armenian Genocide and Diaspora. I
    believe that studying the Armenian Genocide and its aftermath through
    the lens of literature has great value," she continued. "For me, the
    realm of literature provides a space for the intersection of multiple
    disciplines, such as history, sociology and psychoanalytic theory
    and, thus, offers a broad perspective of the genocide's effects in
    the conceptualization of an Armenian Diasporan identity. I am very
    much committed to my project and look forward to the contribution it
    will bring to the discourse on genocide and Diaspora. Aside from the
    financial assistance, the institute's Ph.D.

    scholarship also offers a sense of reassurance for a doctoral student,
    by broadening the often-solitary context within which the research
    is conducted," she added.

    In addition to Chahinian-Mahroukian, the institute also awarded a
    scholarship for the second year to Ms. Sevane Garibian of Paris,
    who is studying the effect of the Armenian Genocide on the Nuremberg
    laws and also on international criminal law related to crimes against
    humanity. Since her award in 2005, Ms. Garibian has published three
    articles; two in French and one in English entitled: "Pour une lecture
    juridique des quatre 'lois memorielles,'" "Le genocide armenien hors
    la loi?," and "Crimes against Humanity and International Legality
    in Legal Theory after Nuremberg." Her work led to her being cited
    in the French Parliament debate in June on penalties for denying the
    Armenian Genocide.

    "I would like to express my warmest thanks to the Zoryan Institute
    and its prestigious Committee for renewing my PhD Scholarship for
    another year," said Garibian. The trust this decision expresses and
    the support it represents in my work are very important to me and
    will give me the chance to finish writing my PhD thesis in the best
    conditions.. I hope the Zoryan scholarship-but also the Genocide and
    Human Rights University Program that the Zoryan Institute provides
    each year-will encourage and motivate other young scholars from all
    over the world to engage in and pursue research and publication in
    this enormous field," she concluded.

    "It is thanks to the vision of people like Dikran and Sonia Bal,
    who wanted to encourage new scholars in this field and provided the
    financial means to establish this scholarship program, that we are
    able to foster and nurture Armenian Genocide studies," said Greg
    Sarkissian, President of the Zoryan Institute.

    The scholarship is open to currently enrolled Ph.D. students in
    good standing at an accredited university who are preparing a
    thesis on the Armenian Genocide or a comparative study with other
    genocides. Candidates must have completed all requirements for the
    Ph.D. except for the dissertation. Applications for the 2007 awards
    are being accepted now, with a closing date of February 28th. For
    inquiries, call 416-250-9807 or write to [email protected].

    The Zoryan Institute is the first non-profit, international
    center devoted to the research and documentation the contemporary
    issues related to social, political and cultural life of Armenians
    worldwide. To this end, the Institute conducts multidisciplinary
    research, publication, and educational programs dealing with Republic
    of Armenia, Genocide, and Diaspora within a universal context.
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