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What Happens After Genocide? Find out at USC Ground Zero Coffeehouse

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  • What Happens After Genocide? Find out at USC Ground Zero Coffeehouse

    February 17, 2015

    USC INSTITUTE OF ARMENIAN STUDIES
    University of Southern California
    Los Angeles, California, USA
    Contact: Salpi Ghazarian, Director
    [email protected]
    213.821.3943


    WHAT HAPPENS AFTER GENOCIDE?

    2015 marks the 100th anniversary of the beginning of the Ottoman
    government's systematic annihilation of its Armenian population. This
    state violence came to be characterized as 'genocide' when the term
    was coined several decades later, and the Armenian experience was used
    as a justification for the need for such a term.

    Both the event itself, as well as the ways in which it is depicted and
    named, are the topic of many conferences, books, exhibits and other
    events around the world this year. Among them, there is the just-
    published book, Great Catastrophe: Armenians And Turks In The Shadow
    Of Genocide. The author, Tom de Waal, will be the guest of the USC
    Institute of Armenian Studies at a lunchtime conversation to be held
    on Monday, February 23, 2015, at 12 noon at the USC Ground Zero
    Coffeehouse.

    The book documents the troubled and deteriorating relationship between
    Armenians and Turks in the decades following the genocide, especially
    focusing on the last half century as Armenians became more vocal in
    demanding that the Turkish government acknowledge the crime of its
    predecessors, even as the Turkish government became more strategic and
    persistent in its denial of the historical events and culpability. The
    unresolved issues continue to affect relations between the two
    countries which share a (closed) border, and have a broader impact on
    relations in what is already a problematic region.

    De Waal will be in conversation on the topics covered in his book and
    beyond with Professor Robert English, Director of the USC School of
    International Relations and an expert on the politics of Russia and
    the former USSR. English was in the region, including Armenia, in the
    years marking the collapse of the Soviet Union. He is the author of
    five books, including Russia and the Idea of the West: Gorbachev,
    Intellectuals and the End of the Cold War.

    De Waal is a senior associate in the Russia and Eurasia Program at the
    Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, specializing primarily in
    the countries and conflicts of the South Caucasus region, as well as
    in the wider Black Sea region. He has worked extensively as a
    journalist and writer, including for the BBC World Service in London,
    and continues to make documentaries for BBC Radio. He is the author of
    the authoritative book on the Karabakh conflict, Black Garden: Armenia
    and Azerbaijan Through Peace and War which has been translated into
    Armenian, Azeri, Russian and Turkish, and of The Caucasus: An
    Introduction, 2010.

    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 studying the region and its challenges and concerns. It's an
    especially important conversation to be having on the anniversary of
    the Genocide, as the term itself continues to be a serious political
    conflict.

    Lunch will be served. The event will be live streamed at:
    http://tinyurl.com/Tom-de-Waal

    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 (USC Ground Zero
    Coffeehouse.)

    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.

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