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Levon Abrahamian to Lecture at NAASR and in Providence

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  • Levon Abrahamian to Lecture at NAASR and in Providence

    PRESS RELEASE
    National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR)
    395 Concord Avenue
    Belmont, MA 02478
    Phone: 617-489-1610
    Fax: 617-484-1759
    www.naasr.org


    MONUMENTS AND POST-SOVIET ARMENIAN
    IDENTITY TO BE EXAMINED IN PAIR OF LECTURES



    The National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR) will
    present an illustrated lecture by Dr. Levon Abrahamian entitled
    "Fighting with Memory and Monuments: Re-Shaping Post Soviet Armenian
    Identity" on Thursday, April 3, at 8:00 p.m., at the NAASR Center, 395
    Concord Ave., Belmont, MA. On April 10, NAASR and the Armenian
    Historical Association of Rhode Island will present the same lecture in
    Providence, RI, at 7:30 p.m. at the Armenian Euphrates Evangelical
    Church, 13 Franklin St., Providence, RI, 02903.

    Dr. Abrahamian is currently Visiting Professor in the Department of Near
    Eastern Languages and Cultures at the University of California, Los
    Angeles. He is the Head of the Department of Contemporary
    Anthropological Studies at the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography
    of the Academy of Sciences of Armenia. He is the author of Armenian
    Identity in a Changing World and the co-editor of Armenian Folk Arts,
    Culture, and Identity, and has authored other books and many articles in
    Armenian and English.

    Reevaluation of Soviet-Era Idols

    Beginning in the years of perestroika, the stormy process of
    reevaluating traditional Soviet key events, heroes, and "gods" was
    started in Armenia. By the end of perestroika and especially in the
    beginning of the post-communist era, much attention was focused on the
    monuments that celebrated these Soviet luminaries and landmark events.
    Abrahamian will discuss the fight over these monuments and their
    symbolism in post-Soviet Armenia with attention to the broader context
    of other post-Soviet countries.

    Naturally, the main focus of the monument-fighters was the great
    "ancestors" of the Soviet regime. Monuments of Stalin had already been
    removed after his death. After Stalin, Lenin remained the main focus of
    the monument-fighters' revolutionary rage. During the anti-monument
    movement, sometimes a kind of reinterpretation of a monument instead of
    its destruction took place, and Abrahamian will present examples.




    The fight over memory and monuments also involves the process of new
    remembering and new monument raising. In general, the talk will give an
    outline of the landscape of monuments in Yerevan and the nature of
    memory discourse in late-Soviet and post-Soviet Armenia.

    More information about the lecture is available by calling 617-489-1610,
    faxing 617-484-1759, e-mailing [email protected], or writing to NAASR, 395
    Concord Ave., Belmont, MA 02478.
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