Seta Kabranian was born in the
Lebanese Armenian town of
Anjar, in 1963. One of six daughters, Kabranian was born into a family that had survived the
Armenian genocide. When she was fifteen, Kabranian met
Monte Melkonian, who at the time was fighting in the
Lebanese Civil War as a member of the
Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia (ASALA). In 1981, Kabranian moved to
Yerevan, in the
Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic (ASSR), where she studied
Armenian literature at
Yerevan State University. After spending 1983–1985 in hiding with Melkonian in Europe, and staying in Lebanon and the United States for a short period, Kabranian returned to Armenia to stay. She graduated as a Master of Arts during the time of the ASSR, and later graduated as a Doctor of Philosophy after the restoration of the Armenian Republic. Following the Armenian declaration of independence, in 1991, Kabranian and Melkonian married at the monastery of
Geghard. Melkonian died two years later, while fighting in the
First Nagorno-Karabakh War. After the war's conclusion, Kabranian established the Monte Melkonian Fund, to aid the families of soldiers that were
wounded or
killed in action. Kabranian began to express distaste with the
social stratification that had taken place in Armenia after the war, noting the stark divide between the Armenians living in poverty and the rich members of the diaspora, the latter of whom had brought with them a culture of
luxury cars and
casinos. American journalist
Thomas Goltz noted that Kabranian sympathised more with Azeri victims of the First Nagorno-Karabakh War than those that had come to dominate the
economy of Armenia. After her work for a refugee aid NGO, Kabranian moved to the United States. There she began studying
creative nonfiction at the
University of Alaska Anchorage (UAA), graduating as a
Master of Fine Arts. She continues to work at UAA as a teacher, and is an affiliate editor for
The Alaska Quarterly Review. She has also continued her activism in refugee aid, as president of the Society for Orphaned Armenian Relief in Anchorage. ==Academic work==