This article argues that the Armenian women living in Istanbul are confined to domestic and communal spaces, and that the roles of symbolizing collective territory and identity, and of cultural reproduction of the community, are mostly associated with women. The data and observations we explore here are based on a field survey of Turkey's Armenian community that was conducted in Istanbul between November 2004 and May 2005. Evaluation of this survey based on both quantitative and qualitative methods allows us to draw some conclusions about the roles of Armenian women in the reproduction of Armenian culture. Women's roles indirectly influence Armenian identity, creating the conditions for its survival
The study intends to investigate the manifestation of power and patriarchy among Armenian marriage a...
Studies on narrative identity have been on the rise in recent decades. This study aims to analyze th...
This article explores the diverse experiences of Turkish rural migrant women in the city and how cit...
The aim of this research note is to describe how Turkey's Armenians, who are the largest non-Muslim ...
This thesis presents the perceptions and dynamics of ethnic, national and religious identity of Arme...
This thesis is an analyses of interviews and observations in the Armenian quarter of Jerusalem. It e...
The purpose of this thesis is to explore what it means to be a young Armenian in Turkey. In order to...
Using survey data gathered from nearly 400 women living in two Istanbul neighborhoods, this article ...
RefereedThe proposed paper based on fieldwork among Armenians in Lebanon, Armenia and Montreal exami...
Based on empirical data obtained from ethnographic fieldwork in Nagorny Karabakh (NK),the article an...
The Armenian people have been living in Asia Minor for around two millennia, long before the Turkic ...
During the last three decades, Turkey’s Armenian landscape witnessed an unprecedented process of div...
The rise of the political Islam has been affecting every sphere of life in Turkey during the last de...
Current studies on Armenian identity trace Armenian identity to specific historical events, such as ...
Citizenship has been hotly debated across many disciplines such as political science and sociology. ...
The study intends to investigate the manifestation of power and patriarchy among Armenian marriage a...
Studies on narrative identity have been on the rise in recent decades. This study aims to analyze th...
This article explores the diverse experiences of Turkish rural migrant women in the city and how cit...
The aim of this research note is to describe how Turkey's Armenians, who are the largest non-Muslim ...
This thesis presents the perceptions and dynamics of ethnic, national and religious identity of Arme...
This thesis is an analyses of interviews and observations in the Armenian quarter of Jerusalem. It e...
The purpose of this thesis is to explore what it means to be a young Armenian in Turkey. In order to...
Using survey data gathered from nearly 400 women living in two Istanbul neighborhoods, this article ...
RefereedThe proposed paper based on fieldwork among Armenians in Lebanon, Armenia and Montreal exami...
Based on empirical data obtained from ethnographic fieldwork in Nagorny Karabakh (NK),the article an...
The Armenian people have been living in Asia Minor for around two millennia, long before the Turkic ...
During the last three decades, Turkey’s Armenian landscape witnessed an unprecedented process of div...
The rise of the political Islam has been affecting every sphere of life in Turkey during the last de...
Current studies on Armenian identity trace Armenian identity to specific historical events, such as ...
Citizenship has been hotly debated across many disciplines such as political science and sociology. ...
The study intends to investigate the manifestation of power and patriarchy among Armenian marriage a...
Studies on narrative identity have been on the rise in recent decades. This study aims to analyze th...
This article explores the diverse experiences of Turkish rural migrant women in the city and how cit...