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.”

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Third International Graduate Students’ Conference on Genocide Studies

 Third International Graduate Students’ Conference on Genocide Studies:

The State of Research 100 Years after the Armenian Genocide

The Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Clark University will host the Third International Graduate Students’ Conference on Genocide Studies: The State of Research 100 Years after the Armenian Genocide on 9-12 April 2015, in cooperation with the Danish Institute for International Studies, Department of Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Copenhagen. The conference will provide a forum for doctoral students to present their research projects to peers and established scholars. The keynote speaker will be Professor Eric Weitz, Dean of Humanities and Arts and Professor of History at the City College of New York. The conference will include discussion and comments from senior genocide scholars: Cecilie Stokholm Bank, Senior Researcher at Danish Institute for International Studies; Matthias Bjørnlund, Lecturer at Danish Institute for Study Abroad; Lerna Ekmekçioglu, McMillan-Stewart Career Development Assistant Professor of History at MIT; Donna-Lee Frieze, Research Assistant, Deakin University Australia; Christian Axboe Nielson, Professorin Department of Culture and Society, Aarhus University; and Strassler Center Faculty: Taner Akçam, Kaloosdian-Mugar Chair in Armenian Genocide Studies; Debórah Dwork, Center Director and Rose Professor of Holocaust History; and Thomas Kühne, Director of Graduate Studies and Strassler Family Chair in the Study of Holocaust History.

This interdisciplinary conference will reflect the full range of issues, concepts, and methods in current Genocide Studies research. The keynote address and a focus on papers that explore the Armenian Genocide are planned in commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the events of 1915. Papers that put the Armenian Genocide in a broader perspective and examine the concept of Ottoman Genocide carried out against minority ethnic-religious groups, including Assyrians and Greeks, are especially encouraged. Topics may include forceful mass–deportations, expulsions, and massacres during the late Ottoman period. We also invite pertinent applications from students working on the Holocaust as well as those who focus on genocides in Africa, Asia, Australia, and America as well as on the aftermath and collective memorialization of genocides.

Paper proposals from graduate students and recent post-docs (since 2012) across all disciplines are invited. The costs of travel, accommodation, registration, and meals will be covered for applicants whose papers are accepted.

Interested applicants should submit for consideration: 1) a short curriculum vitae (one page max.) including name, address, email, and telephone number; 2) the title and an abstract of your paper (approx. 300 words, one page max. in English), addressing its basic arguments, its sources, and its relation to your dissertation project (for instance: summary, proposal, or chapter of the dissertation); and 3) a brief letter from your advisor indicating your enrollment in a doctoral program. We also invite applications for complete panels consisting of three to four papers. Such submissions should include a panel description of approx. 500 words.

We are currently accepting applications. The final deadline is August 15, 2014. Please email materials to StrasslerGradConference@clarku.edu.

If you have questions, you may contact conference organizer Dr. Sarah Cushman, scushman@clarku.edu, or conference director Taner Akҫam, Kaloosdian Mugar Professor of Armenian Genocide Studies, takcam@clarku.edu. For information on previous conferences, see http://www.clarku.edu/departments/holocaust/conferences/chgsgraduate/.