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  • Graduate Student Colloquium in Armenian Studies

    PRESS RELEASE
    February 4, 2009
    Armenian Graduate Students Association at UCLA
    Graduate Students Association
    c/o Armenian Graduate Students Association
    Kerckhoff Hall Room 316
    308 Westwood Plaza
    Los Angeles, CA 90024
    Contact: Tamar Boyadjian
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Website: http://www.studentgroups.ucla.edu/agsa


    SEVENTH ANNUAL GRADUATE STUDENT COLLOQUIUM IN ARMENIAN STUDIES AT
    UCLA, FEBRURARY, 20, 2009

    The Armenian Graduate Students Association at UCLA invites the public
    to the seventh annual, Graduate Student Colloquium in Armenian Studies
    at UCLA on Friday, February 20, 2009. This day-long academic event
    will begin at 9:30 AM and be held in the famous Royce Hall, room 314.

    This year, the organizing committee has set out to continue the fine
    tradition that began in 2003 with the launching of the first-ever
    international colloquium in Armenian Studies developed specifically
    for graduate students by graduate students. UCLA, a premier
    institution for the growing field of Armenology and a leader in
    interdisciplinary studies, is hosting this event to further foster the
    development of Armenian Studies, facilitate interaction between
    graduate students and faculty from various institutions, provide a
    medium for the exchange of ideas, and contribute to the professional
    and academic advancement of graduate students.

    Studies from multiple fields will be presented, including history,
    education, archeology, sociology, musicology, theology, anthropology
    and art history. Presenters are graduate students coming from
    universities and countries all around the world, including UCLA
    California State University Fresno, University of Montana-Missoula,
    Florida International University, The University of Chicago, Columbia
    University, University of Michigan, New School for Social Research,
    and multiple institutes within the Republic of Armenia.

    This year, the organizing committee was led by Tamar Boyadjian, a
    graduate student in Comparative Literature. She was joined by a number
    of graduate student, as well as faculty advisor, Dr. Peter Cowe.
    Graduate students from across many disciplines were responsible for
    the individual aspects of developing the event. This ranged from
    financing to program scheduling, facilities and refreshments to travel
    and accommodations, as well as both academic and media public
    relations.

    Armenian Studies at UCLA began in 1960. The discipline was augmented
    in 1962 with the appointment of Dr. Richard G. Hovannisian, current
    holder of the Armenian Educational Foundation Chair in Modern Armenian
    History. In 1965, language and literature was established on a
    permanent footing with the arrival of Dr. Avedis K. Sanjian, who
    guided the expansion of this area over the next three decades. The
    Narekatsi Chair, founded in 1969 through the efforts of National
    Association for Armenian Studies and Research, has the distinction of
    being the oldest endowed chair at UCLA. The first chair-holder was Dr.
    Sanjian and in July 2000 Dr. S. Peter Cowe was appointed as successor.
    Since 1997 regular instruction in East Armenian has complemented
    teaching in West Armenian: currently Dr. Anahid Keshishian is lecturer
    in the former and Dr. Hagop Kouloujian in the latter. In 1998,
    Armenian Studies was officially recognized as an undergraduate minor
    and currently proposals are underway to institute the major.

    The Graduate Student Colloquium in Armenian Studies is yet another
    step in the development of the rich tradition of Armenian Studies at
    UCLA. Organized by graduate students, for graduate students, it
    provides an opportunity for students to actively and significantly
    contribute to the academic environment on campus.

    The colloquium is made possible, in part, by the financial
    contributions from UCLA Center for Near Eastern Studies, the Center
    for Indo-European Studies, the Center for European and Eurasian
    Studies, the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, the
    department of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures, as well as the
    Graduate Division of the UCLA administration. The committee also
    received financial support from the Campus Programs Committee of the
    Program Activities Board.

    The event is free of charge and open to the public.

    2009 Graduate Student Colloquium in Armenian Studies Friday, February
    20, 2009 ¢ UCLA Royce Hall 314

    9:30 - 10:00 AM Breakfast
    10:00 - 10:15 AM - Opening Remarks

    Tamar Boyadjian ¢ Project Director, 2008 Graduate Student Colloquium
    in Armenian Studies
    Dr. S. Peter Cowe ¢ Professor and Narekatsi Chair in Armenian Studies at UCLA

    Session 1 ¢ ART AND ARCHAEOLOGY

    10:15 - 10:35 Hasmik Hovhannisyan ¢ Archaeology and Ethnography,
    National Academy of Sciences (Armenia)
    "Currency and Diffusion of Byzantine Anonymous Folles in Armenian Coin Finds"

    10:35 - 10:55 Hazel Antaramian-Hofman ¢ Art and Design, California
    State University of Fresno (USA)
    "Visual Identification and Tracing of Cultural Provenance of Textile
    Motifs in the 11th-Century Miniature of King Gagik-Abas and his
    Family"

    10:55 - 11:15 Dianna Mirijanyan ¢ Archeology and Anthropology,
    National Academy of Sciences (Armenia)
    "Armenian Ceramic in the Cultural Context of Western and Eastern
    Construction Techniques "

    11:15 - 11:35 Discussion
    11:35 - 11:50 Coffee Break

    Session 2 ¢ ISSUES IN ARMENIAN EDUCATION

    11:50 ` 12:10 Arda J. Melkonian ¢ Education & Information Studies, UCLA (USA)
    "Code-Switching Practices in an Armenian Private School"

    12:10 - 12:30 Doris K. Melkonian ¢ Education & Information Studies, UCLA (USA)
    "How Gender is Played Out in an Armenian Private School"

    12:30 - 12:50 Sossi Essajanian¢ Anthropology, New School for Social
    Research (USA)
    "Educating Future Citizens: A Consideration of the Education System of
    Nagorno-Karabagh"

    12:50 - 1:10 Discussion
    1:10 - 2:30 Lunch Break

    Session 3 ¢ THE CONTEMPORARY INTERFACE OF ART, CULTURE, AND POLITICS

    2:30 - 2:50 Jeremy Johnson ¢ Anthropology and History, University of
    Michigan (USA)
    "Reading New Woman Aloud: Literacy and Gender(ed) Performances in
    Early Soviet Armenia"

    2:50 ` 3:10 Diana K. Ter-Ghazaryan ¢ International Relations,
    Florida International University (USA)
    "'For the Benefit of Yerevan's Residents'": Post-Soviet
    Transformations and National Identity in the Armenian Capital"

    3:10 - 3:30 Milena Oganesyan ¢ Anthropology, University of
    Montana-Missoula (USA)
    "St. Norashen Church: A Perspective from Inside"

    3:30 - 3:50 Hamlet Melkumyan ¢ Cultural Anthropology and Cultural
    Studies, Yerevan State University (Armenia)
    "Presenting and Re-shaping Armenian Traditional Cultures in the
    Yerevan Vernisage"

    3:50 - 4:10 Discussion
    4:10 - 4:20 Tea Break

    Session 4 ¢ ARMENIAN PERIODICAL PRESS

    4: 20 - 4:40 Melissa Bilal ¢ The University of Chicago, Ethnomusicology (USA)
    "Teotig's Amenun DaretsuytsÄ- (Almanac for All) and its Kegharvesdagan
    (Art) Pages"

    4:40 - 5:00 Tsolin Nalbantian ¢ Middle East and Asian Languages
    and Cultures, Columbia University (USA)
    "Competing Sites in the Development of a Nation: The Armenian Press in
    Lebanon (1946-1956) and the Armenian Capital"

    5:00 - 5:15 Discussion
    5:15 - 5:30 Guest Speaker

    5:30 - 7:00 Reception
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