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The Many Truths of The Middle East at USC on Nov. 12, 2014

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  • The Many Truths of The Middle East at USC on Nov. 12, 2014

    PRESS RELEASE
    November 7, 2014


    USC INSTITUTE OF ARMENIAN STUDIES
    Contact: Salpi Ghazarian/Director
    Email: [email protected]
    Tel: 213.509.7109


    THE MANY TRUTHS OF THE MIDDLE EAST

    Harout Ekmanian, a Syrian-Armenian journalist, will be the guest of
    the USC Institute of Armenian Studies at a lunchtime conversation to
    be held on Wednesday, November 12, 2014, at 12 pm at the Tutor Campus
    Center (TCC) 450 Forum, on campus.

    Entitled "The Many Truths of the Middle East," Harout will speak about
    the difficult task facing anyone studying the modern Middle East, at
    any time, and especially now, as violence rages across borders and
    among communities who have forged bonds and lived together in the same
    state for decades or centuries. USC Professor Sandy Tolan, a
    journalist who teaches at the USC Annenberg School for Communication
    and Journalism, will be guiding the discussion.

    Harout is a journalist who had worked with Arab and western media for
    years prior to the beginning of the war. He has lived in Armenia for
    over three years and works in various capacities at CivilNet.TV, an
    Internet television that serves as a platform for discourse on issues
    facing Armenia and the region. Harout produces reports on and from
    Turkey and the Arab Middle East, focusing on inclusive regional
    dialogue among experts and stakeholders, including Armenians, Turks,
    Kurds and Arabs. During the conflict, he traveled to Syria, including
    the border with Turkey, reporting on refugees from northern Syria. He
    has a broad perspective on old and new struggles for identity and
    dominance in the region.

    Sandy Tolan is a journalist whose book The Lemon Tree presented a
    nuanced, intimate look at the complex struggles and adversities that
    have come to define the Middle East generally, and Israeli-Arab
    relations specifically. He has produced many programs from the
    region. He teaches Radio Journalism at the USC Annenberg School for
    Communication and Journalism.

    Salpi Ghazarian, the director of the USC Institute of Armenian
    Studies, says, "We invite the community to the USC campus for this
    program. This, like our previous lunchtime programs, is not a
    lecture. It's a conversation between two people who have spent many
    years writing about the Middle East, trying to explain past and
    present challenges, and the search for peace. Understanding their
    work is critical to understanding that intractable-seeming part of the
    world which is increasingly closer and closer to us."

    Lunch will be served.

    The event will be live streamed at: https://capture.usc.edu/Mediasite/Play/f8589d1f67e6497abc8afcddf21b70bc1d

    Directions and parking information:

    We advise guests to park in Parking Structure D, which is located on
    the corner of Jefferson and Figueroa (across from the Shrine). See
    attached map for the location of the event (Tutor Campus Center, TCC
    450, Forum).

    Please call 213.821.3943 if you have any questions regarding the
    event, including parking and directions.

    About the Institute
    Established in 2005, the USC Institute of Armenian Studies supports
    multidisciplinary scholarship to re-define, explore and study the
    complex issues that make up the contemporary Armenian experience -
    from post-Genocide to the developing Republic of Armenia to the
    evolving Diaspora. The institute encourages research, publications and
    public service, and benefits from communication technologies that link
    together the global academic and Armenian communities.

    ###


    From: Baghdasarian
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