Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://dspace.ctu.edu.vn/jspui/handle/123456789/71485
Title: A self-portrait of the Armenian artist as Homo Sacer "The Biopolitical limits of Hagop Mintzuri’s life writing"
Authors: Aktokmakyan, Maral
Keywords: Homo Sacer
Self-portrait
Armenian artist
Biopolitical limits
Hagop Mintzuri’s life writing
Issue Date: 2020
Series/Report no.: Biography;Vol. 43, No. 02 .- P.341-360
Abstract: In 1916, when James Joyce published his semi-autobiographical novel A Portrait of the Artist as A Young Man while leading a self-induced exilic life in Europe, Hagop Demirjian, an Ottoman-Armenian from eastern Anatolia, was struggling to reorganize his own life after becoming a hostage in Istanbul in the immediate after- math of the Armenian Genocide in 1915. As apart of a long and violent process of Turkish nation-building, the systematic ethnic cleansing of Armenians living in the Ottoman Empire in 1915 was the last stage of the transformation and homogenization of the imperial state into a Turkish nation-state in 1923.¹ Although estimates suggest that more than one million Armenians living in the provinces were either violently killed or deported to the farthest corners of the empire (a prolonged form of extermination deployed mostly against women and children who were subjected to starvation and rape), the imperial seat was partly excused and excluded from the mass killings by the Young Turk-led Ottoman government.² That year changed Demirjians life irrevocably, as he lost everything he owned: his close and distant family, his village, his simple rural life.
URI: https://dspace.ctu.edu.vn/jspui/handle/123456789/71485
ISSN: 0162-4962
Appears in Collections:Biography

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
_file_
  Restricted Access
3.93 MBAdobe PDF
Your IP: 3.17.154.171


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.