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UMich ASP: Armenian Apocalyptic Tradition: A Comparative Perspective

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  • UMich ASP: Armenian Apocalyptic Tradition: A Comparative Perspective

    PRESS RELEASE/FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE/PRESS RELEASE

    For Further Information, please contact:
    Ms. Gloria Caudill, Administrator
    Armenian Studies Program
    University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
    Tel: (734) 763-0622
    Email: [email protected]


    An International Conference
    "The Armenian Apocalyptic Tradition: A Comparative Perspective"
    Held at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor


    An international conference entitled: "The Armenian
    Apocalyptic Tradition: a comparative perspective," organized by the
    Armenian Studies Program and co-sponsored by nine University of
    Michigan institutes, centers and departments, was held at the
    University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, 16-19 October, 2008. Twenty-three
    scholars from Armenia, Bulgaria, Canada, England, France, Georgia,
    Israel, Italy, Russia, Sweden and the USA read papers and held
    discussions on the Armenian Apocalyptic tradition in a comparative
    context. Three presentations visually illustrated the manifestations
    of the apocalyptic traditions in Armenian art and architecture.
    The idea of a conference on the theme was initially
    independently conceived by Kevork B. Bardakjian (University of
    Michigan) and Sergio La Porta (Hebrew University of Jerusalem). It
    was agreed to hold conferences in both the Hebrew University and the
    University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. The first was held in Jerusalem
    (2007) and the second followed at Ann Arbor.
    Since the Armenian apocalyptic tradition, in the wider context
    of the term, has been an inadequately explored realm, both conferences
    blazed a trail by covering much ground in the field. The Ann Arbor
    conference stressed the comparative aspects of such texts with
    groundbreaking accomplishments in some respects. Armenian apocalyptic
    literature was reviewed in a wider chronological and thematic range,
    and in a comparative fashion, against a background of traditional
    apocalyptic literature, highlighted by renowned scholars in the fields
    of Jewish, Syriac, Byzantine, Ethiopic, Slavonic, Bulgarian and
    Manichaean apocalypticism. The findings of the scholars were
    meaningfully supplemented by some most interesting discussions that
    contributed considerably to the integration of Armenian into the wider
    context of apocalyptic studies. The new light shed on the Armenian
    texts accentuated the importance of further and deeper studies into
    the standard tradition and its diverse
    expressions that go far beyond the traditional confines of the genre,
    particularly in the late medieval and early modern as well as the
    contemporary eras. Similarly, the conference clearly brought out the
    growing significance of apocalypticism as an agent for the genesis of
    national identity and underlined the need for new definitions and
    approaches by which the apocalyptic worldview might be appreciated as
    a phenomenon common to all cultures.
    Plans are under way to publish the proceedings as a volume
    in English. Prof. Kevork B. Bardakjian was the main convener of the
    conference.
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