News & Events

Slide 1
SAS Holds 50th Anniversary Conference at Harvard and NAAASR

The Society for Armenian Studies (SAS) marked its 50th Anniversary with a three-day groundbreaking international conference at Harvard University and the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR). Titled “Armenian Studies: Evolving Connections and Conversations,” the conference took place September 13-15, 2024.

Slide 2
Ari Şekeryan Awarded Der Mugrdechian SAS Outstanding Book Award

Ari Şekeryan’s "The Armenians and the Fall of the Ottoman Empire: After Genocide, 1918–1923" (Cambridge University Press, 2023) have been awarded this year’s Der Mugrdechian SAS Outstanding Book Award. Talar Chahinian was a co-winner.

Slide 3
Talar Chahinian Awarded Der Mugrdechian SAS Outstanding Book Award

Talar Chahinian’s Stateless: "The Politics of the Armenian Language in Exile" (Syracuse University Press, 2023) have been awarded this year’s Der Mugrdechian SAS Outstanding Book Award. Ari Şekeryan was a co-winner.

Slide 4
SAS Holds 50th Anniversary Conference at Harvard and NAAASR

The Society for Armenian Studies (SAS) marked its 50th Anniversary with a three-day groundbreaking international conference at Harvard University and the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR). Titled “Armenian Studies: Evolving Connections and Conversations,” the conference took place September 13-15, 2024.

Slide 5
Dr. Victoria Abrahamyan Awarded SAS Distinguished Dissertation Award (2020-2023)

The Society for Armenian Studies (SAS) is pleased to announce that Dr. Victoria Abrahamyan has been chosen to receive the SAS Distinguished Dissertation Award (2020-2023) for “Between the Homeland and the Hostland: (Re)Claiming the Armenian Refugees in French Mandatory Syria, 1918-1946.”

previous arrowprevious arrow
next arrownext arrow

Call for Scholarly Contributions: Journal of the Society for Armenian Studies (JSAS) 2021 

The Journal of the Society for Armenian Studies (JSAS) invites scholarly contributions for two thematic volumes to be published in 2021 through Brill publishing house in Leiden, Netherlands. Please see below for outlined topics and deadlines. Submissions and questions should be directed to the Editor-in-Chief, Dr. Tamar M. Boyadjian at: jsas@brill.com. Please also follow in your submission the guidelines set forth in the JSAS Submission Guidelines at: brill.com/jsas.

The JSAS is the foremost periodical dedicated to Armenian Studies in the Western Hemisphere. The journal publishes bi-annually, peer-reviewed scholarship from all disciplinary and comparative perspectives relating to Armenians and the field of Armenian Studies. The JSAS is committed to fostering new directions in the field, encouraging global, cross-cultural, and interdisciplinary submissions that align with cutting-edge scholarly research across all periods and research areas. The journal also features shorter pieces in the Reviews and Reconsiderations section (R&R) that inform us of new discoveries and engage in conversations around art, literature, and theory.

JSAS SPRING 2021: PERFORMANCE

This volume seeks to explore transcultural and interdisciplinary conversations around the theme of performance and performativity (broadly defined), as it pertains to Armenians and Armenian Studies, from the classical to the contemporary period. The volume is especially interested in contributions from: film studies, music and ethnomusicology, theatre and playwriting, manuscript and visual culture, disability studies, and museum studies.

Studies that engage with the theme of performance and performativity in one or more of the following ways are also highly encouraged:

-performance of social identities: gender & sexuality, race, ethnicity, nationality, and class

-performances of bodies as linked to gender and identity (broadly defined)

-performances in & as adaptations in theatre, dance, and music

-performance in & as adaptation in film (feature and documentary), television, and pop culture

-ritual as performance, especially the role of women

-culture and heritage as performance

-language, multilingualism, and translation as performances in written & visual culture

-digital adaptations and the role of the digital, especially under socio-technological conditions

-performative interruptions

Submission Deadline: May 1, 2021

JSAS FALL 2021: INDIGENEITY

This volume seeks to explore transcultural and interdisciplinary conversations around the theme of indigeneity, the indigenous experience, and trans-indigeneity (broadly defined), with an emphasis on frameworks that create dialogues of healing. The volume encourages contributions that have a focus on Artsakh from any period, examined through the lens of: cultural preservation; folk, literary and cultural accounts; language, translation, and appropriation; identity and trauma studies; & plant-based and spiritual healing rituals and practices.

Studies that engage with the theme of indigeneity in one or more of the following frameworks are also highly encouraged:

-subaltern studies

-postcolonial studies

-oral and literary customs and practices

-art as healing (all forms)

-plants, the earth, and the land as healing

-specularity

-ethnohistory

-“Indigenous futurism”

-(de)legitimization

-origins, ancestry, and mythical consciousness of people and land

-space and place (theory & testimony)

-comparative studies with other indigenous groups

-the potential overlap of indigeneity and nationalism

Submission Deadline: September 1, 2021