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UCLA: Armenian students host speakers on heritage

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  • UCLA: Armenian students host speakers on heritage

    The UCLA Daily Bruin, CA
    Feb 19 2008



    Armenian students host speakers on heritage

    a.. Allison Fung (Contact)

    b.. Published: Tuesday, February 19, 2008

    The Armenian Graduate Students Association held its sixth annual
    colloquium on Friday afternoon - an event that featured speakers from
    domestic and international universities in panels pertaining to
    topics in Armenian studies.


    This year, graduate students attended from Armenia, Hungary,
    Germany and Turkey; as well as from University of California, Irvine
    and California State University, Northridge.

    The topics discussed were "art and architecture," "identity
    construction in the diaspora," "ritual and cultural performance," and
    "narrative and community."

    "There is no other event like this in the world," Raffi
    Kassabian, executive director of the Armenian Graduate Students
    Association said. "This (was) organized by grad students for grad
    students."

    Panelists presented from thesis papers and PowerPoint
    presentations. After the conclusion of each panel, audience members
    were invited to ask the panelists questions about their research.

    Arpi Siyahian, a member of the association's organizing
    committee, said the themes of the colloquium vary every year.

    "We do a call for papers among universities with Armenian
    studies," she said.

    After the papers are collected, the committee does a "blind
    aspect," in which the names of the authors of the papers are removed.
    The committee evaluates the material and invites the top 10 graduate
    students to UCLA to speak.

    Kassabian, a law student as UCLA, said the association is a
    mentorship for both undergraduate and graduate students.

    He said events like the colloquium add to the dimension of
    Armenian studies, which, as shown by the diverse topics and speakers
    at the colloquium, is a very interdisciplinary major.

    The committee hopes to expand the colloquium, perhaps to a
    two-day conference next year, Siyahian said.

    Attendees at the colloquium ranged from UCLA professors to
    alumni.

    "My old Armenian studies professor sent me an e-mail (about the
    colloquium)," said David Abrahamian, a UCLA Class of 2007 alumnus.
    "There are some unbelievable topics and interesting analysis here."

    In panelist Anna Harutyunyan's paper, "Cultural Diversity and
    Belongingness," she specifically focused her analysis on the identity
    crisis of Armenian communities in Berlin. She said while Armenians
    identify strongly with their culture, they have difficulty naming
    Armenia or Germany as their homeland.

    She added that she also had this crisis, as she is Armenian but
    grew up in Berlin.

    An audience member asked if intermarriage between Armenians and
    non-Armenians existed in a country where Armenians were the minority
    culture.

    Harutyunyan replied that while it was not common, intermarriage
    did occur.

    Abrahamian added that before entering UCLA, he did not speak the
    Armenian language well at all.

    "Now I love topics like these," he said.
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