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Chris Atamian wins the inaugural Tölölyan prize in contemporary lite

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  • Chris Atamian wins the inaugural Tölölyan prize in contemporary lite

    Chris Atamian wins the inaugural Tölölyan prize in contemporary literature

    http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2013-05-26-chris-atamian-wins-the-inaugural-t-l-lyan-prize-in-contemporary-literature
    Published: Sunday May 26, 2013


    Christopher Atamian.


    WATERTOWN, MASS. - The Hamazkayin Armenian Educational and Cultural
    Society of Eastern United States is pleased to announce the winner of
    the inaugural Minas and Kohar Tölölyan Prize in Contemporary
    Literature. Mr. Christopher Atamian was chosen as the winner for his
    translation of Nigoghos Sarafian's The Bois de Vincennes.

    Christopher Atamian is a translator, writer, and director. He produced
    the OBIE Award-winning play Trouble in Paradise in 2006 and was
    included as an invited artist to the 2009 Venice Biennale for his
    video Desire. His short films and videos have screened throughout the
    world and he publishes regularly in such publications as The
    Huffington Post and The New York Times and was for several years the
    dance critic for the now-defunct New York Press. He has written one
    novel, Speaking French, and is at work on several commercial musicals
    and film scripts.

    In his activities as a translator, Atamian has translated six books
    from French and Western Armenian into English, including Nigoghos
    Sarafian's The Bois de Vincennes. Among the other books he has
    translated, three have been in Armenian studies for the Middle Eastern
    Studies Department at Columbia University: Krikor Beledian's Fifty
    Years of Armenian Literature in France, and two books by Marc
    Nichanian: Literature and Catastrophe and The Armenian Language
    Throughout History. He also translated Philippe Delma's The Rosy
    Future of War (The Free Press) and is currently at work on Denis
    Donikian's Vidures/Offal, an award-winning novel published on Actes
    Sud.

    Mr. Atamian has worked in senior positions for leading media companies
    including ABC, Ogilvy Interactive and JP Morgan's marketing division.
    He received his BA from Harvard University, his MBA from Columbia
    Business School and is also an alumnus of USC Film School. He has been
    a Fulbright, Bronfman and Gulbenkian Scholar. Atamian has been active
    in the Armenian community since he was a teenager and has served on
    the Board of the Columbia Center for Armenian Studies and as Executive
    Director of the Armenia Fund USA. He was the elected President two
    years running of AGLA NY and currently sits on this organization's
    Board of Trustees.

    Named after one of the major Armenian literary critics of the second
    half of the Twentieth century and his wife, a devoted teacher of that
    literature for decades, the annually awarded prize recognizes the work
    produced by talented writers working in North America. The prize is
    intended to encourage new work in all the major genres of literary
    production, as they are currently understood in North America,
    including poetry, drama, fiction, memoir, travel writing and other
    forms of creative non-fiction, as well as translation. Works in
    Armenian, English, French and Spanish are considered, as long as the
    authors are of Armenian ancestry, and/or the work has an Armenian
    theme or revolves around an Armenian topic.

    The primary purpose of the Prize is to encourage and offer recognition
    through the award and through the ensuing publicity those who wish to
    write about Armenian themes and topics. There is also a financial
    award of $2,500 associated with the prize, made possible through the
    generosity of Mr. and Mrs. Edward and Vergine Misserlian of San
    Francisco, CA.

    The jury judging all submissions consists of Dr. Sima Aprahamian
    (Montreal), Dr. Vartan Matiossian (New York/New Jersey), Mr. Gourgen
    Arzoumanian (California), Mr. Yervant Kotchounian (California) and
    Prof. Khachig Tölölyan (Connecticut).

    The Prize was announced at Hamazkayin's Annual Pan Gathering on May 4,
    2013 in Boston.

    The Eastern USA region of Hamazkayin Armenian Educational and Cultural
    Society, a 501 c (3) not for profit organization, constitutes one of
    the branches of the worldwide Hamazkayin family, founded in 1928. The
    Eastern United States region, headquartered in Massachusetts, consists
    of eight chapters in Boston, Chicago, Detroit, New Jersey, New York,
    Philadelphia, Providence and Washington, DC.

    We aim to empower our chapters and membership to nurture and promote
    Armenian arts and culture. Given our millennia long history, we are
    cognizant of the dynamic nature of the concept of identity. To that
    end, we strive to maintain our cultural identity and heritage and are
    committed to grow and further the contribution of the Armenian culture
    to the complex tapestry of world civilizations.

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