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Libros antiguos y modernos

Stepan Norair Chahinian.

The power of emptiness: Talking with stones in historical Armenia.= Boslugun gücü: Tarihi Ermenistan'da taslarla konusmak.

Aras Yayincilik, 2015

42,30 €

Khalkedon Books, IOBA, ESA Bookshop

(Istanbul, Turquía)

Habla con el librero

Formas de Pago

Detalles

Año de publicación
2015
ISBN
9786055753498
Lugar de impresión
Istanbul
Autor
Stepan Norair Chahinian.
Páginas
0
Editores
Aras Yayincilik
Formato
4to - over 9¾ - 12" tall
Materia
BAH ORT T. ARMENICA ARMENIA ARMENIAN ARMENIANS NON-MUSLIM, MINORITIES MINORITY ARMÉNIENS MINORITÉ NON MUSULMANE CULTURE, NICHT-MUSLIMISCHE MINDERHEIT ARMENIER ARMENI MINORANZA MUSULMANA, NO MUSULMANES ARMENIOS MINORÍA IKKE-MUSLIMSK MINORITET ARMENERE, OF THE PHOTOGRAPHY ARCHAEOLOGY, Armenica, Photography
Idiomas
Inlgés
Encuadernación
Tapa dura

Descripción

New English Original cloth bdg. Oblong 4to. (24 x 30 cm). In English and Turkish. 200 p., color and b/w photographs. The power of emptiness: Talking with stones in historical Armenia.= Boslugun gücü: Tarihi Ermenistan'da taslarla konusmak. The photographs taken in Turkey by São Paulo (Brazil) born photographer Norair Chahinian strike viewers in a number of different ways. First through their witnessing of life in various regions of Anatolia 'from the outside', by someone who has come all the way from across the world, thousands of kilometers afar. But more importantly, through their depiction 'from within' of the return of an Armenian to his roots in Maras, Urfa, Iskenderun, as he visits the land of his family after a gigantic lapse of one hundred years. Norair Chahinian was born in Brazil as the child of a family that had fallen victim to the Committee of Union and Progress' genocidal politics against Armenians during the final era of the Ottoman Empire. His grandmothers and grandfathers had lost their families during those days of catastrophe, took refuge in Aleppo, Syria, under dire circumstances and had migrated to Brazil, South America. This quest brought the photographer to Turkey where he knew no one, did not speak the language; where he was familiar neither with the climate nor the ways of the people. But in no way as a tourist. He came here determined to build a bridge between the past and present, as the last link of a family who was the victim and witness of the catastrophe experienced one hundred years ago but had managed to live, survive and build a new life on the other side of the ocean. ARMENIANS Armenia Photography Art.
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