Columbia University in the City of New York

Harriman Institute

Events
Image of a window in front of mountains. Image links to event page.

Date

April 28, 2025 | 5:00 PM - 7:00 PM

Location

Marshall D. Shulman Seminar Room, 1219 International Affairs Building
420 W 118th Street, 12th floor, New York, NY 10027, United States
“To Go On Living”: Public Reading and Conversation with Narine Abgaryan

Reserve Your Seat

 

 

 

Registration REQUIRED by 12pm on April 25, 2025 in order to attend this event.

Please join the Harriman Institute, Armenian Center, MESAAS, and The Society of Fellows and Heyman Center for the Humanities for a public reading and conversation with Narine Abgaryan. Moderated by Knar Abrahamyan.

Wars affect human life in the profoundest and most irreversible ways. How does one reconcile the pain of witnessing, survival, and loss? Armenian writer Narine Abgaryan’s short story collection “To Go On Living” (published April 2025 in English) sets out to explore potential answers. Unfolding in an Armenian mountain village in the immediate aftermath of the 1990s Nagorno-Karabakh War, the thirty-one short stories trace the interconnected lives and struggles of villagers who tend to their everyday tasks, engage in quotidian squabbles, and celebrate small joys against a breathtaking landscape. “Writing about war,” Abgaryan writes, “is like destroying your hope, like looking death in the face without looking away, because, if you do, you will betray yourself.”

Join us for a public reading of select passages from Abgaryan’s collection, followed by a conversation with the author and the English-language translators of the book: Dr. Margarit Ordukhanyan and Dr. Zara Torlone (Professor, Miami University, OH). Reception and book signing will follow the event.

Named one of Europe’s most exciting authors by The Guardian, Narine Abgaryan is the author of a dozen books, which have collectively sold over 1.35 million copies. Her book “Three Apples Fell From the Sky” (Oneworld, 2020) won the Leo Tolstoy Yasnaya Polyana Award and an English PEN Award, and has been translated into 27 languages.

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