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  • Title: Language Attitudes, Collective Memory and (Trans)National Identity Construction Among the Armenian Diaspora in Bulgaria
  • Title: Non-Dominant Varieties of Pluricentric Languages. Getting the Picture

    Non-Dominant Varieties of Pluricentric Languages. Getting the Picture

    In Memory of Michael Clyne- In Collaboration with Catrin Norrby, Leo Kretzenbacher, Carla Amorós
    by Rudolf Muhr (Volume editor) 2012
    ©2012 Conference proceedings
  • Title: Post-Soviet Conflicts Revisited

    Post-Soviet Conflicts Revisited

    by Hans-Georg Heinrich (Volume editor) 2013
    ©2013 Others
  • Title: Armenians around the World: Migration and Transnationality

    Armenians around the World: Migration and Transnationality

    by Artur Mkrtichyan (Volume editor) 2015
    ©2015 Conference proceedings
  • Title: The Armenian Church in Soviet Armenia

    The Armenian Church in Soviet Armenia

    The Policies of the Armenian Bolsheviks and the Armenian Church, 1920-1932
    by Jakub Osiecki (Author) 2020
    ©2020 Monographs
  • Title: Exegesis and Hermeneutics in the Churches of the East

    Exegesis and Hermeneutics in the Churches of the East

    Select Papers from the SBL Meeting in San Diego, 2007
    by Vahan Hovhanessian (Volume editor)
    ©2009 Monographs
  • Title: American Holiness Churches in the Holy Land 1890-2010

    American Holiness Churches in the Holy Land 1890-2010

    Mission to the Jews, Arabs and Armenians
    by Paul Schmidgall (Author)
    ©2012 Thesis
  • Title: Through a Lens Darkly

    Through a Lens Darkly

    Films of Genocide and Ethnic Cleansing
    by John J. Michalczyk (Volume editor) SJ Raymond G. Helmick (Volume editor) 2012
    ©2013 Textbook
  • Title: Exercising Human Rights in Armenia

    Exercising Human Rights in Armenia

    Interactions between governmental and non-state actors
    by Liana Geghamyan (Author) 2020
    ©2020 Thesis
  • Title: Presentation of Democracy Culture and News in Turkish Media

    Presentation of Democracy Culture and News in Turkish Media

    Issues of Scientific Responsibility and Democracy
    by Burcu Peksevgen (Author) 2021
    ©2021 Thesis
  • Title: Reproduction of Armenianness in Diasporic Spaces

    Reproduction of Armenianness in Diasporic Spaces

    A Comparative Analysis of Armenianness in Turkish, Lebanese and British Cases
    by Mustafa Tayfun Üstün (Author)
    ©2020 Edited Collection
  • Title: Christology of the Oriental Orthodox Churches

    Christology of the Oriental Orthodox Churches

    Christology in the Tradition of the Armenian Apostolic Church
    by Mesrob K. Krikorian (Author)
    ©2010 Edited Collection
  • Title: The Rights of Armenian Minorities in Lebanon and Turkey under National and International Law
  • Title: Analytical Comparative Etymological Dictionary of Reduplication in the Major Languages of the Middle East and Iran
  • Bible in the Christian Orthodox Tradition

    This series aims at exploring and evaluating the various aspects of biblical traditions as studied, understood, taught, and lived in the Christian communities that spoke and wrote – and some continue speaking and writing – in the Aramaic, Arabic, Armenian, Coptic, Georgian, Romanian, Syriac, and other languages of the Orthodox family of churches. A particular focus of this series is the incorporation of the various methodologies and hermeneutics used for centuries in these Christian communities, into the contemporary critical approaches, in order to shed light on understanding the message of the Bible. Each monograph in the series will engage in critical examination of issues raised by contemporary biblical research. Scholars in the fields of biblical text, manuscripts, canon, hermeneutics, theology, lectionary, Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha will have an enormous opportunity to share their academic findings with a worldwide audience. Manuscripts and dissertations, incorporating a variety of approaches and methodologies to studying the Bible in the Eastern and Oriental Orthodox traditions – including, but not limited to, theological, historiographic, philological and literary – are welcome. This series aims at exploring and evaluating the various aspects of biblical traditions as studied, understood, taught, and lived in the Christian communities that spoke and wrote – and some continue speaking and writing – in the Aramaic, Arabic, Armenian, Coptic, Georgian, Romanian, Syriac, and other languages of the Orthodox family of churches. A particular focus of this series is the incorporation of the various methodologies and hermeneutics used for centuries in these Christian communities, into the contemporary critical approaches, in order to shed light on understanding the message of the Bible. Each monograph in the series will engage in critical examination of issues raised by contemporary biblical research. Scholars in the fields of biblical text, manuscripts, canon, hermeneutics, theology, lectionary, Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha will have an enormous opportunity to share their academic findings with a worldwide audience. Manuscripts and dissertations, incorporating a variety of approaches and methodologies to studying the Bible in the Eastern and Oriental Orthodox traditions – including, but not limited to, theological, historiographic, philological and literary – are welcome. This series aims at exploring and evaluating the various aspects of biblical traditions as studied, understood, taught, and lived in the Christian communities that spoke and wrote – and some continue speaking and writing – in the Aramaic, Arabic, Armenian, Coptic, Georgian, Romanian, Syriac, and other languages of the Orthodox family of churches. A particular focus of this series is the incorporation of the various methodologies and hermeneutics used for centuries in these Christian communities, into the contemporary critical approaches, in order to shed light on understanding the message of the Bible. Each monograph in the series will engage in critical examination of issues raised by contemporary biblical research. Scholars in the fields of biblical text, manuscripts, canon, hermeneutics, theology, lectionary, Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha will have an enormous opportunity to share their academic findings with a worldwide audience. Manuscripts and dissertations, incorporating a variety of approaches and methodologies to studying the Bible in the Eastern and Oriental Orthodox traditions – including, but not limited to, theological, historiographic, philological and literary – are welcome.

    6 publications

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