Nascent narratives of Armenian remembrance: The Armenian genocide reflected in the Armenian-American press

被引:1
|
作者
Dilanian-Pinkowicz, Karina [1 ]
机构
[1] Polish Acad Sci, Inst Philosophy & Sociol, Nowy Swiat 72, PL-00330 Warsaw, Poland
关键词
Armenian genocide; cultural memory; cultural trauma; diaspora; Armenian-Americans; COLLECTIVE MEMORY;
D O I
10.1177/14687968221120735
中图分类号
C95 [民族学、文化人类学];
学科分类号
0304 ; 030401 ;
摘要
This article explores the cultural memory of the Armenian genocide archived, to a major extent, in non-digitized form. In the initial decades following the genocide, the memory of the crimes committed against Armenians in 1915 was almost non-existent in the public space of America. Monuments, demonstrations, state, and international resolutions, and other instruments of memorialization did not materialize until the 1960s when, as a result of worldwide Armenian mobilization ahead of the 50(th) anniversary, traces of genocide remembrance were gradually brought to life. Analyzing two Armenian newspapers from the United States - Hairenik Weekly (HW) and The Armenian Mirror-Spectator (AMS) - this paper reveals how Armenians recollected the genocide in the decades preceding the emergence of subsequent lieux de memoire. What evoked their memories before 1965? And how did narratives change over time, eventually leading to the "exteriorization of Armenian memory"? The case of the Armenian genocide shows that memories of a traumatic event can quickly penetrate the cultural sphere, but remain closed for longer in the narrow framework of a specific community. This had consequences, including an almost complete lack of representation of the genocide in the public domain - one that would be designed by Armenians for non-Armenians. The process of meaning-making (traced through editorials from the two Armenian-American newspapers) influenced a gradual bridging of the representation gap in the American public space, beginning in 1965.
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页码:449 / 474
页数:26
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