Zabel Yessayan: A Brave New Voice
Zabel Yessayan was one of the leading voices of her time, an advocate for social justice and women’s rights in Ottoman Armenian society. In this video, Judith Saryan describes an important period in Yessayan’s life, when at 17 she left her childhood home in Constantinople to study at the Sorbonne in Paris and began what would become a lifelong career in writing and activism. Unafraid to fight for her convictions even in the face of harsh criticism, Zabel published essays and articles about women’s issues both in Paris and back at home in Constantinople, where she would eventually return to continue her work.
About the speaker
Նկար
Judith Saryan
Judith Saryan embarked on a career in publishing, editing and writing after 37 years in finance. In partnership with the Armenian International Women's Association (AIWA), she helped to publish three works in English translation by Zabel Yessayan.
Judith Saryan
Judith Saryan embarked on a career in publishing, editing and writing after 37 years in finance. In partnership with the Armenian International Women's Association (AIWA), she helped to publish three works in English translation by Zabel Yessayan.
Related Webtalks
Freedom of Speech vs. Genocide Denial Laws
Zabel Yessayan: Writing Against Injustice
Gladstone, Religion and Armenia
An Inconvenient Genocide
Zabel Yessayan: Writing Against Injustice
Menk: Literature of Exile in Post-WWI Paris
Zabel Yessayan: In the Gardens of Silihdar
An Obsession with Denial
Reflections on the First Republic
Aurora Mardiganian: Survivor, Witness, Activist
Komitas
Leadership of the First Republic
Armenian Feminism in Post-Genocide Turkey
Aram Khachaturian: Early Years
Armenian Art and Creative Exchange on Medieval Trade Routes
The Kurdish Minority: From Perpetrator to Victim
The Stages of Genocide
Aurora Mardiganian: Survivor, Witness, Activist
The Genocide of Pontic Greeks and Assyrians
ՆՎԻՐԱԲԵՐԵ՛Ք ՀԲԸՄ-ԻՆ
Գործե՛ք հանուն մարդկության բարօրության: Նվիրաբերե՛ք այսօր: