Professor Kouymjian Participates in Three May
Conferences
The Center for Near Eastern Studies of the University of California, Los
Angeles
sponsored a special colloquium entitled "Renegotiating Identity in Terms of the
Other:
Armeno-Islamic Interchange in Anatolia during the Second Half of the Thirteenth
Century," on Friday May 2, 1997 on the UCLA campus. Following a UCLA tradition,
Dr. Peter Cowe, Visiting Associate Professor of Armenian Studies in the
Department of
Near East Languages, invited one other specialist, Prof. Dickran Kouymjian, to
consider
in depth the role of Armenians in Asia Minor after the Mongol invasion. The two
papers
were prepared in advance and distributed to faculty and graduate students for
study. The
focus of the conference was on the writers Yovhannes and Konstantine Erzinkats'i
and
their relationship and assimilation of trends in Islamic culture.
The first paper entitled "Urban Brotherhoods in the Thirteenth Century and
the
Canons of Yovhannes Erzinkac'i" was present by invited guest Dr. Kouymjian,
Haig &
Isabel Berberian Professor of Armenian Studies and Director of the Armenian
Studies
Program, California State University, Fresno. He discussed in detail the
Constitution
written by Yovhannes Erzinkats'i in 1280 for the Armenian Brotherhood of
Erzinjan and
its relation to similar Islamic fraternal organizations.
The second paper "Poetic Renewal as Indicator of Societal Redefinition" was
given
by Dr. Peter Cowe, who considered the poetics of the both Konstantine and
Yovhannes
and their interchange with Islamic culture.
Prof. Leslie Pierce, Visiting Professor of Ottoman History at UCLA, was the
chair
and discussant of the Colloquium. She emphasized how important it was to make
available this rich Armenian source material to specialists of medieval Islamic
history and
literature because it presented a fascinating insider's view of what urban life
was like in
the transition period after the Mongol conquest and before the rise of the
Ottomans.
A lively discussed ensued around a number of questions related to early
Armenian-
Mongol, Armenian-Islamic and Armenian-Turkic relations in the pre-Ottoman
period.
Topics ranged from the preservation of minority cultural monuments, in this case
Armenian, to statistics on population and demography. Both Profs. Cowe and
Kouymjian
spoke about the influence of literary and historical conventions from the
Islamic world on
Armenian intellectuals. Dr. Kouymjian explained that the cultural borrowings
which
took place in both directions illustrates how vibrant Armenian culture was in
those years.
"Armenians were players in the game," he said, "sometimes minor, sometimes
major, but
always present. It was only 1915 and the Genocide which took them out of the
great
cultural exchanges in Asia Minor, to the apparent loss of Anatolian culture
which is
poorer now than ever before."
Professor Kouymjian will participate in two other conferences in May. On
Saturday, May 10th he will present a paper entitled "Who Reads Saroyan Today" at
a
conference on "William Saroyan and Contemporary Scholarship," sponsored by the
Stanford University Libraries. The conference, which begins at 10 AM and
continues
into the afternoon, is part of a celebration of the consolidation of the William
Saroyan
Literary Collection at Stanford University. It is open to the public.
The following weekend, May 17-18, he will participate at the special
conference
"Armenian Van/Vaspurakan" organized by Prof. Richard Hovannisian at UCLA. On
Saturday, May 17 he will give a paper entitled "Van under Mongol-Turkmen
Domination," and on the following day, Sunday May 18, he has been invited to
give an
illustrated lecture on "Pictoral Memories of Armenian Van." The UCLA Van
Conference
will be held from 9:30 AM to 5:30 PM on Saturday and 1:30 to 5:30 PM on Sunday
in
1200 Rolfe Hall. It is free and open to the public.