by Heather Sanders
Scholar, dancer and poet Celeste Nazeli Snowber fully understands the restorative and transformative power of art. For over two decades, as a professor of arts education at 間眅埶AV she has used her proficiency as a performance artist and researcher to inspire other artist-educators to use the arts as a place of discovery, and to express their research in artistic ways.
We can have scholarship that is deeply alive and beautiful, says Snowber. Using my expertise in embodied inquiry, we find out what really matters, whats visceral and important. I want to break down the barriers of what scholarship can be.
Snowbers research interests converge within curriculum theory, arts-based research, dance, somatics, spirituality, poetic inquiry, contemplative and holistic education and embodied ways of knowing. Her work informs the growing field of ecopoetics and arts-based environmental education. In 2016, she was recognized with the , acknowledging the importance of integrating critical cultural exploration into curriculum, and exploring lived curriculum alongside planned curriculum.
My work focuses on arts-based research泭and integrating the arts, in particular poetic inquiry and embodied ways of research and scholarship, says Snowber, I dont separate my identity as a poet from my identity as a scholar, artist or performer. At the heart of my work is the integration between body and mind, physicality and spirituality, and an emphasis on connecting the personal and universal. Poetry is one way of discovering what we know and dont know.
Snowber has recently released her third book of poetry, , which traces her journey to connect with her Armenian heritage, and understand her experiences as a descendant of genocide survivors, while providing insights into universal themes of longing and belonging.
The Armenian community resided in the Middle East for thousands of years, alongside the earliest empires of the Persians, Greeks, Romans, Byzantines, and Arabs. They developed unique literature, art, music, textiles, cuisine and architecture. They adopted Christianity and developed a distinct alphabet.泭
At the start of the 20th century, as the Ottoman Empire began to fall, Armenians, which represented ten percent of the population were persecuted, culminating in the ruthless ethnic cleansing known as the . It is estimated that between 1915 and 1917, 1.5 million Armenians泭were murdered, suffering unspeakable brutality including death marches into the Syrian desert.
Celeste Snowbers mother Grace Terzian left historic Armenia in 1913泭just before the start of World War One. Snowber notes that it took decades before she understood how the trauma of the genocide had affected her mother and herself. She wanted to connect with the roots of a deep culture that had been severed, and she wanted to work though these experiences in poetry.
As a child, I didnt understand the trauma my mother experienced, says Snowber. But as you get older, you see that trauma is really in the body. This is a way to give voice to my own history, or herstory. By allowing it to have a voice, I can move through it. Art becomes a container, an expression, for that which is so difficult, but can also birth something new.
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The Story of One
If we only have fragments
arent all our pieces a whole?
what happens to one
happens to all
so much has gone missing
strands of DNA
whisper a mystery
泭
the story of one
is the survival of a nation.
- Celeste Nazeli Snowber
泭pg. 31 in The Marrow of Longing
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Snowber explains that while the book does delve into the heavy themes of generational trauma and loss, it also celebrates the rich and enduring Armenian culture, family and relationships, food and poignant memories. Drawing upon recollections and experiences, her mothers love letters to her father during World War II, and her own travels to Armenia, the book embraces the depth of her heritage while working through fragments of the past.
It also celebrates the concept of longing, reflects Snowber. The word longing is part of the word belonging. If you listen to Armenian music you can feel a deep sense of longing. And Ive come to terms with this longing. The book is appropriately titled泭the Marrow of Longing泭because of her ancestry泭its something that Snowber says she can feel in her bones.
I also feel that my ancestors have been with me in this process. Poetry, dance and art are fertile ways to bring together the fragments of ancestral memory, to form a whole.
It is my hope that others will see the fragments of their own stories as a place to open up the treasures of cultural identity and see art as a way of healing intergenerational trauma. As I say in one poem, Here I offer fragments, and a fragment can hold a world.
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Celeste Nazeli Snowbers book is available through HARP Publishing and the . Ten percent of the proceeds from the sale of the book will benefit the泭
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