Exact time and location of lecture TBD
The Armenian Woman, Minoritarian Agency, and the Making of Iranian Modernity, 1860–1979
Speakers:
Houri Berberian (Professor of History & Meghrouni Family Presidential Chair in Armenian Studies, School of Humanities. Director of the Center for Armenian Studies)
Talinn Grigor (Professor of Art and Architectural History, Modern and Contemporary Global Architecture and Art Critical, Race, Feminist, and (post) Colonial Theory)
Houri Berberian and Talinn Grigor offer the first history of Armenian women in modern Iran. Foregrounding the work of Armenian women’s organizations, the authors trace minoritarian politics and the shifting relationships among doubly minoritized Armenian female subjects, Iran’s central nodes of power, and the Irano-Armenian patriarchal institutions of church and political parties.
Engaging broader considerations around modernization, nationalism, and feminism, this book makes a conceptually rich contribution to how we think about the history of women and minoritized peoples. Berberian and Grigor read archival, textual, visual, and oral history sources together and against one another to challenge conventional notions of “the archive” and transform silences and absences into audible and visual presences. Understanding minoritarian politics as formulated by women through their various forms of public and intellectual activisms, they provide a groundbreaking intervention in Iran’s history of modernization, Armenian diasporic history, and Iranian and Armenian feminist historiography.
Sponsored by the Friends of Robert Aram and Marianne Kaloosdian and Stephen and Marian Mugar Professor in Armenian Genocide Studies