Cummings Foundation Grant Recipient

Pavagan E (Enough!) Zabel Yesayanʼs (1878–1943?) Political Thought on Peace, Justice, and Peopleʼs Right to Self-Defense ~ Monday, April 21, 2025

Anna Aleksanyan Ararat-Eskijian Museum Center for Near Eastern Studies Melissa Bilal NAASR Narekatsi Chair in Armenian Studies Richard Hovannisian Endowed Chair of Modern Armenian History at UCLA The Promise Armenian Institute The Promise Institute for Human Rights at UCLA School of Law UCLA Center for the Study of Women Zabel Yesayan

FEATURED SPEAKERS:

Melissa Bilal, the Promise Professor in Armenian Music, Arts, and Culture at UCLA.  Dr. Bilal’s ethnographic research explores the role of music in the transmission of Armenian memory in Turkey, while her archival research is focused on the musical and intellectual history of Armenians in the late Ottoman Empire and early republican Turkey. Her most recent publications are the book chapter “Pavagan E (Enough!): Zabel Yesayan’s (1878–1943?) Political Thought on Peace, Justice, and People’s Right to Self-Defense” in Histories of Political Thought in the Ottoman World (Oxford University Press, 2024) and the co-authored book Feminism in Armenian: A History in Twelve Biographies and Primary Sources (Indiana University Press, Forthcoming 2026). She is currently working on a biography of pianist and composer Koharik Gazarossian (1907-1967) and on her ethnography Injuries of Reconciliation: Music, Memory, and Everyday Survival of Armenians in Turkey.

Anna Aleksanyan, a postdoctoral fellow with the Armenian Genocide Research Program at the Promise Armenian Institute. She earned her Ph.D. from the Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Clark University. Her research focuses on gendered aspects of the Armenian Genocide, particularly the experiences of victimized females between 1914 and 1918. Before pursuing her doctoral studies, she worked for seven years as a senior research fellow and head of the Source Studies of the Armenian Genocide department at the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute.
Aleksanyan received her B.A. and M.A. in History from Yerevan State University. From fall 2019 to fall 2022, she served as an adjunct lecturer at the American University of Armenia.

 

This lecture focused on Armenian feminist writer and activist Zabel Yesayan’s “Pavagan E (Enough!)” published in 1922 in Vienna’s Arek (Sun) monthly. A piece of creative non-fiction or autobiographical fiction on the First Balkan War, “Pavagan E” lends itself to a discussion of Yesayan’s standpoint with regard to peace, justice, and people’s right to self-defense. In the period between autumn 1912, when Yesayan penned “Pavagan E,” and January 1922, when it came out in print, she escaped the purges against Armenian intellectuals in Constantinople, spent the war years and the post-war period working on the ground to provide aid for the survivors of the Armenian Genocide, to save orphans, and to prepare eye-witness reports. This talk offered a reading of “Pavagan E” in light of Yesayan’s political activism and other writings to contextualize the text as a fundamental work in the history of Ottoman political thought.

CO-SPONSORS:

The Promise Armenian Institute

Center for Near Eastern Studies

UCLA Center for the Study of Women

The Promise Institute for Human Rights at UCLA School of Law

Narekatsi Chair in Armenian Studies

Richard Hovannisian Endowed Chair of Modern Armenian History at UCLA

NAASR

Ararat-Eskijian Museum


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