Some things I have been writing recently have made me think about libraries...
And I found myself sharing notes with Khachig Tölölyan, historian of the Armenian Diaspora, founder and editor of the journal DIASPORA...
A web search will find much stuff, including a video of a conversation with Robin Cohen...
http://vimeo.com/25020401
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/diaspora_a_journal_of_transnational_studies/
When we shared notes, Khachig was in Venice. And I remarked that I must be one of the few people in the world who has visited both the library at San Lazzaro degli
Armeni, in the lagoon of Venice, AND the Matenadaran in Yerevan, Armenia. Maybe the only non-Armenian...?
Khachig emailed back, 'Colour me impressed...'
San Lazzaro degli Armeni has its own Wikipedia entry...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Lazzaro_degli_Armeni
In 1717 the Republic of Venice gave the island to the Catholic Armenian Mechitarist religious order - the monks had fled westwards after the Ottoman invasion of the Morea (the Peleponnese). The most famous visitor to the island was most probably Byron - though the present day monks seem a little puzzled that fewer and fewer people have heard of Byron. I was especially interested in the place of Venice, and the island, in the development of Armenian printed books. All in all, a fascinating example of the vagaries of diaspora, and struggle for the survival of culture and knowledge...
This is the Wikipedia entry for the Matenadaran...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matenadaran
As all the world knows, I am not a happy traveller. But whenever I do travel, and wherever I travel, I make pilgrimage to the libraries...
As a further example... A long time ago I was travelling in the Scottish Borders. And I came across a sign, pointing sharply up a minor road: Library. And so, in that bleak upland place, I found the Leadhills Miners' Library...
http://www.leadhillslibrary.co.uk/
The Leadhills Miners Reading Society was founded in 1741, and is the oldest subscription library in the British Isles. The miners bought books with their own money - the rules of the society are really worth reading. Working class self-organisation. Again, poignant, significant, the struggle for knowledge...
Patrick O'Sullivan
January 2015
No comments:
Post a Comment