Thursday, April 22, 2021, at 2:00 pm Eastern / 11:00 am Pacific
Live on Zoom. Registration is required and free.
PRESENTER
HARRY HAROOTUNIAN, Professor Emeritus at NYU
Inaugural Raymond H. Kévorkian Armenian Genocide Commemoration Lecture
DISCUSSANT
TODD PRESNER, Chair of the Digital Humanities Program and Ross Professor of Germanic Languages and Comparative Literature at UCLA
Harry Harootunian’s The Unspoken as Heritage: The Armenian Genocide and its Unaccounted Lives is an attempt to reach an unattainable history by addressing the experience and memories of his parents, who escaped the Armenian Genocide of 1915-1916 and migrated to the United States to confront the magnitude of a second challenge of adaptation and economic security in an entirely different environment. Their afterlives in Detroit, where they raised three children, were marked by a void of silence provoked by what they had experienced and the loss they had incurred to configure a daily life continually mediated by the defeating historical effects of genocidal policies Armenians had been subjected to during the closing years of Ottoman rule.
Born in 1929 in the United States, Harry Harootunian is among the leading professional historians of East Asia, focusing on Japan’s early modern and modern history. He is the author of Marx after Marx: History and Time after Capitalism (Columbia University Press, 2015) and Uneven Moments: Reflections on Japan’s Modern History (Columbia University Press, 2019). He was formerly the Max Palevsky Professor, Emeritus of History and Civilizations at the University of Chicago, the dean of Humanities at the University of California, Santa Cruz, editor of Journal for Asian Studies, and co-editor of Critical Inquiry.
ORGANIZER
UCLA Richard Hovannisian Chair of Modern Armenian History
CO-SPONSORS
UCLA Department of History
UCLA Luskin Institute for Policy and History
UCLA Promise Armenian Institute (PAI)
UCLA Center for Near Eastern Studies (CNES)
National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR)
Society for Armenian Studies (SAS)
Click here for the flyer. Click here to purchase The Unspoken As Heritage from the NAASR Bookstore. Click here to view the video.