Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Hovannisian visits Clark University, lectures on Armenian Genocide

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Hovannisian visits Clark University, lectures on Armenian Genocide

    PRESS RELEASE
    Clark University
    University Communications
    Angela M. Bazydlo
    Associate Director of Media Relations
    Tel: 508-793-7635
    cell: 508-365-8736
    email: [email protected]
    web: www.clarku.edu

    May 15, 2008

    Hovannisian visits Clark University, lectures on Armenian Genocide

    WORCESTER, MA-This spring, Clark University's Strassler Family Center
    for Holocaust and Genocide Studies welcomed Richard Hovannisian,
    Professor Emeritus of Armenian and Near Eastern History, University of
    California, Los Angeles. Professor Hovannisian served as the Robert
    Aram and Marianne Kaloosdian and Stephen and Marian Mugar
    Distinguished Visiting Scholar at Clark the week of April 14. He
    delivered lectures in classes, and met with doctoral students and
    faculty.

    On April 22, he presented a free, public lecture, "Must We Still
    Remember?

    The Armenian Genocide as Prototype," to a large audience. A video of
    the lecture is now available online at
    www.clarku.edu/offices/mediaservices/videoarchi ve/playvideo.cfm?id=3D126.

    The Armenian Genocide of 1915 was the most calamitous event in the
    long and turbulent history of the Armenian people. In many ways it
    also became the prototype of modern cases of forced population
    transfer and mass murder. Professor Hovannisian will analyze the
    murderous violence against the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire in
    relation to subsequent genocides in the 20th and now in the 21st
    centuries.

    A member of the UCLA faculty since 1962, Professor Hovannisian has
    organized the undergraduate and graduate programs in Armenian and
    Caucasian history and served as the associate director of the G.E. von
    Grunebaum Center for Near Eastern Studies from 1978 to 1995. He was
    the first to hold the post of Armenian Education Foundation Endowed
    Chair in Armenian History at UCLA.

    Professor Hovannisian received his bachelor's and master's degrees
    from the University of California, Berkley. He received his
    Ph.D. from UCLA. He is the author of "Armenia on the Road to
    Independence"; "The Republic of Armenia," Volumes I-IV; and "The
    Armenian Holocaust"; and has edited and contributed to many scholarly
    journals dedicated to Armenian history, politics and genocide. He
    serves on the board of directors of nine scholarly and civic
    organizations and has made numerous television and radio appearances.

    The mission of the Strassler Family Center for Holocaust and Genocide
    Studies is to educate undergraduate and graduate students about
    genocide and the Holocaust; to host a lecture series, free of charge
    and open to the public; to use scholarship to address current problems
    stemming from the murderous past; and to participate in the public
    discussion about a host of issues ranging from the significance of
    state-sponsored denial of the Armenian genocide and well-funded denial
    of the Holocaust to intervention in and prevention of genocidal
    situations today.

    Clark University is a private, co-educational liberal-arts research
    university with 2,200 undergraduate and 800 graduate students. Since
    it's founding in 1887 as the first all-graduate school in the United
    States, Clark has challenged convention with innovative programs such
    as the International Studies Stream, the University Park Partnership,
    and the accelerated BA/MA programs with the fifth year tuition-free
    for eligible students. The University is featured in Loren Pope's
    book, "Colleges That Change Lives.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X