The denial of Armenian massacre has created a milieu of secrecy and silence among the inheritors of victims and perpetrators alike, establishing the ‘unspeakable as heritage’. Despite the organized forgetting, this secrecy is being unravelled and disentangled in affective embodied encounters in potentially errant and ambiguous ways. To address this productive-affective dimension, Yeğenoğlu will examine a survivor story and the new milieu created by the affective encounter between an Armenian grandmother, who survived her abduction during the forced deportation of Armenians and has lived her life as a Muslim with a Turkish name, keeping her Armenian-Christian heritage secret for many years, revealing this secret to her granddaughter only at ...
The centenary year of the Armenian genocide witnessed an escalation in cultural production and both ...
This dissertation study explored the cultural identity experiences of Armenian Genocide descendants....
First paragraph: Where are we beyond denial? This was the key question of a workshop that we organiz...
In this paper, we discuss what role gender plays in remembering, transmitting, and reframing memorie...
Women suffered the major burden of the consequences of the Armenian Genocide, such as lost family, l...
Within an interdisciplinary creative practice through artworks comprising of video and installations...
There is great concern over the mental health of Armenian women in the wake of the Armenian “#metoo”...
Drawing on concepts such as post-genocide literature, postmemory (Marianne Hirsch), and resonance (A...
The Grandchildren is a collection of intimate, harrowing testimonies by grandchildren and great-gran...
Why should we return to the now 100-year-old genocide of the Ottoman Armenian population? The study ...
Updated version of an earlier article published in L'Homme: European Journal of Feminist History 24(...
The centenary year of the Armenian genocide witnessed an escalation in cultural production and both ...
This thesis examines the effects of the Armenian Genocide on five Armenian American university stude...
Purpose of the study: The purpose of this study demonstrated how Armenian Massacres as crime fiction...
In nationalist Armenian American youth activism and expression, the practice of memory of woundednes...
The centenary year of the Armenian genocide witnessed an escalation in cultural production and both ...
This dissertation study explored the cultural identity experiences of Armenian Genocide descendants....
First paragraph: Where are we beyond denial? This was the key question of a workshop that we organiz...
In this paper, we discuss what role gender plays in remembering, transmitting, and reframing memorie...
Women suffered the major burden of the consequences of the Armenian Genocide, such as lost family, l...
Within an interdisciplinary creative practice through artworks comprising of video and installations...
There is great concern over the mental health of Armenian women in the wake of the Armenian “#metoo”...
Drawing on concepts such as post-genocide literature, postmemory (Marianne Hirsch), and resonance (A...
The Grandchildren is a collection of intimate, harrowing testimonies by grandchildren and great-gran...
Why should we return to the now 100-year-old genocide of the Ottoman Armenian population? The study ...
Updated version of an earlier article published in L'Homme: European Journal of Feminist History 24(...
The centenary year of the Armenian genocide witnessed an escalation in cultural production and both ...
This thesis examines the effects of the Armenian Genocide on five Armenian American university stude...
Purpose of the study: The purpose of this study demonstrated how Armenian Massacres as crime fiction...
In nationalist Armenian American youth activism and expression, the practice of memory of woundednes...
The centenary year of the Armenian genocide witnessed an escalation in cultural production and both ...
This dissertation study explored the cultural identity experiences of Armenian Genocide descendants....
First paragraph: Where are we beyond denial? This was the key question of a workshop that we organiz...