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U.Mich ASP: Dr. Sebouh Aslanian To Discuss Julfan Armenian Trade

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  • U.Mich ASP: Dr. Sebouh Aslanian To Discuss Julfan Armenian Trade

    PRESS RELEASE
    For further information, please contact:
    Gloria Caudill, Administrator
    Armenian Studies Program
    University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
    [email protected]
    (734) 763-0622


    DR. SEBOUH ASLANIAN TO DISCUSS JULFAN ARMENIAN TRADE AT THE UNIVERSITY
    OF MICHIGAN


    The Armenian Studies Program announces an upcoming public lecture by
    Dr. Sebouh Aslanian, who is a Manoogian Simone Foundation
    Post-Doctoral Fellow this year. The lecture is titled "Trust in Gossip
    but Bastinado when Needed: Policing long-distance 'Trust relations'
    among Julfan Merchants during the Early Modern Period."

    The lecture will be held on Tuesday, March 3 at 5 p.m. in Room 1636 of
    the International Institute.

    In his presentation, Dr. Aslanian will examine the role of "trust" and
    cooperation in early modern long-distance trade. He will focus on the
    history of Armenian merchants from New Julfa, Isfahan in the 17th and
    18th centuries, but he will also compare Julfan methods of policing
    trust to those of two contemporaneous long-distance communities,
    namely the Multani Indians and Sephardic Jews. While most literature
    on the subject posits trust as a given attribute of long-distance
    merchant communities and not as a factor in need of historical
    explanation or analysis, Dr. Aslanian provides a historical
    explanation for the creation and role of trust in such communities.

    Dr. Aslanian's talk is related to his upcoming book publication, From
    the Indian Ocean to the Mediterranean: Circulation and the Global
    Trade Networks of Armenian Merchants from New Julfa/Isfahan, 1606-1747
    (University of California Press, forthcoming 2010). This manuscript is
    based on his Ph.D. dissertation, which was selected by the Graduate
    School as the best dissertation in the humanities at Columbia
    University (2007). He is also the author of Dispersion History and the
    Polycentric Nation: The Role of Simeon Yerevantsi's Girk or Kochi
    Partavjar in the Armenian National Revival of the 18th Century (2004),
    and numerous articles about Indian Ocean trade and Armenian merchants
    from New Julfa.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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