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Conference on Ani at Columbia University

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  • Conference on Ani at Columbia University

    PRESS RELEASE
    The Armenian Center at Columbia University
    Media Contact: Taleen Babayan
    Email: [email protected]
    Tel: 201-693-3453


    Groundbreaking Symposium at Columbia University Focusing on Monuments &
    Memory, in Commemoration of the 100th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide,
    To Be Held February 20

    By Taleen Babayan


    Major scholars from around the world will participate in a timely, and
    thought-provoking conference at Columbia University, `Monuments and Memory:
    Material Culture and the Aftermath of Histories of Mass Violence' on Friday,
    February 20, 2015.

    This all-day symposium concentrating on material culture and memory, with
    the ruins of the ancient Armenian city of Ani as the centerpiece, is
    organized and hosted by Peter Balakian, Donald M. Constance H. Rebar
    Professor of the Humanities at Colgate University, and Rachel Goshgarian,
    Assistant Professor of History at Lafayette College, and sponsored by the
    Armenian Center of Columbia University, Columbia's Institute for the Study
    of Human Rights, the Institute for Comparative Literature and Society, and
    the Armenian General Benevolent Union.

    The conference will explore the general themes of restoration, restitution
    and social justice and will be groundbreaking in its comparative analysis
    of Jewish monuments in Eastern Europe, Muslim monuments in the Balkans, and
    Armenian-Christian monuments in Turkey.

    Four sessions revolving around these topics will take place throughout the
    day, each chaired by a member of the Columbia community who will conduct
    and moderate the question and answer sessions.

    The first session, `Monuments and Memory: the Significance of Material
    Culture in the Aftermath of Genocide,' (10:00 a.m. to 11:15 a.m.), chaired
    by Christine Philliou, Associate Professor of History at Columbia
    University, will address the historical contexts for the destroyed or
    appropriated material cultures of minority peoples in the aftermath of
    histories of mass violence. The current conditions of these monuments will
    be analyzed, as well as their roles in collective memory for both occupying
    and exiled cultures. Presenters include Peter Balakian; Andrew Herscher,
    Associate Professor of Architecture at the University of Michigan, Ann
    Arbor; and Marianne Hirsch, William Peterfield Trent Professor of English
    and Comparative Literature at Columbia University.

    The second session, `The Medieval Armenian City of Ani: A Case Study in the
    Politicization of Art History, History, Historical Monuments and
    Preservation in a Post-Genocidal Context,' (11:30 a.m. to 12:45 p.m.),
    chaired by Nanor Kebranian, Assistant Professor in the Department of Middle
    Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies at Columbia University, will
    include papers on subjects related to Ani's multicultural past, cultural
    destruction, restoration projects, depiction in modern Turkey, and place in
    the construction of Armenian identity. Presenters include Rachel
    Goshgarian; Christina Maranci, Arthur H. Dadian and Ara Oztemel Associate
    Professor of Armenian Art and Architecture at Tufts University; Heghnar
    Watenpaugh, Associate Professor of Art History at the University of California,
    Davis; and Yavuz Ozkaya, Restoration Architect at PROMET Architecture and
    Restoration Co.

    The third session, `Monuments, Memory, Restitution, and Social Justice:
    What issues do monuments raise in these historical contexts? How can social
    justice and restitution be achieved decades after the event of genocide or
    mass-killing?' (2:15 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.) will be chaired by Hamid Dabashi,
    Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative Literature at
    Columbia University. Presenters include Osman Kavala, Founder of Anadolu
    Kultur; Leo Spitzer, Kathe Tappe Vernon Professor of History at Dartmouth
    University; and Elazar Barkan, Professor of International and Public
    Affairs at Columbia University.

    The concluding session will be a round table discussion followed by a
    reception for participants and attendees.

    `Rachel and Peter are bringing together a wide range of speakers to address
    the issue of Ani, from historians to cultural heritage advocates, to
    practicing architects actively engaged in restoration projects at Ani,'
    said Maranci.

    `I hope that it will galvanize more dialogue about the fate of the churches
    and other ancient monuments in and around Ani, because of their historical
    and architectural importance and because of their structural
    vulnerability.'

    `There is tremendous opportunity here to address the painful history of
    Armenians and Turkey and forge a different way forward regarding Armenian
    cultural heritage in Turkey,' said Watenpaugh, who recently published,
    `Preserving the Medieval City of Ani: Cultural Heritage Between Contest and
    Reconciliation' in the *Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians*
    *.* `This is the right time to have a critical and public discussion about
    this site, and the broader issues it raises.'

    Mark Momjian Esq., Chair of the Armenian Center and an alumnus of Columbia
    College and Columbia Law School, emphasized his alma mater's role not only
    in aiding the survivors of the Armenian Genocide, but in advocating support
    of the Armenian Republic.

    `Ambassador Henry Morgenthau was an alumnus of Columbia Law School, and he
    is in the pantheon of heroes to the Armenian people. Talcott Williams was
    the first director of Columbia's School of Journalism, and he was heavily
    involved with Near East Relief. George Edward Woodbury, a comparative
    literature professor at Columbia, assailed the perpetrators of the Armenian
    Genocide. And there are countless others,' said Momjian, a Philadelphia
    lawyer and community activist. `This symposium marks the centennial of the
    Armenian Genocide, but it also honors the many Columbians who denounced
    this terrible crime against humanity and who worked tirelessly to help the
    Armenian people.'

    The event will take place in Room 1501 of Columbia University's Morningside
    Campus International Affairs Building, located at 420 West 118th Street,
    from 10 a.m. until 6 p.m. with breaks for lunch and coffee. A reception
    will follow. This event is free and open to the public.


    From: Baghdasarian
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