Russian Language Lab: Amelia Parkes recites Pushkin’s “The Tale of the Dead Princess and the Seven Knights”.Interviews a Native Russian Speaker and Amelia Parkes’ translates THE APPLES OF YOUTH AND THE WATER OF LIFE: A RUSSIAN FAIRY TALE (adapted by Aleksey Tolstoy) Russian Language Lab Senior Projects – Celia M.Nina Wilson Receives Scholarship to Study in Russia.New Format: Synchronous and Asynchronous Classroom for Fall 2017 Russian Lit Online.Amelia Parkes Interviewed for CEERES Newletter.New Life Readers Series begins in January, 2018.Join Frank Biletz and Julia Denne at the Newberry for a Free Program on Tuesday, September 10, 2019.Life Readers in 2020: Join us at the Arlington Heights Memorial Library to read and discuss Fyodor Dostoevsky’s “The Idiot”. Schedule Changes due to COVID-19 – Updated April 27, 2020.Life Readers Schedule for May and June, 2020.creates animation for “Baggage” by Samuil Marshak Announcing Teen Online Course for 2020-2021: 19th Century Russian Short Fiction.Petersburg’s Culture, Myth, and Everyday Life New and Unique Online Course for Fall of 2021 through Spring of 2022 – Russian History from Peter the Great to the 1910s: St.Teen Literature Course for Fall 2021 and Spring 2022: 19th Century Russian Literature and Film Adaptations.Summer of 2022 at the Newberry – Mikhail Vrubel: Fusion of Art and Literature.Registration opens Augfor Newberry Seminar From Russian Folk Epics and Holy Fools to Putin’s Propaganda.Newberry course for 2023 – Focus on Ukraine: Gogol’s Ukrainian Tales, Babel’s Odessa Stories, and Bulgakov’s White Guard.The Annotated Story: Narine Abgaryan’s “Manyunya Performs at an End-of-Year Recital, or an Original Cure for Fear of Heights”.2016 Amelia Parkes wins award at the XIV International Olympiada of Russian Language in Moscow.2016 Illinois ACTR Olympiada of Spoken Russian.2015 Illinois ACTR Olympiada of Spoken Russian.2014 ACTR Illinois/Indiana Olympiada of Spoken Russian – Reeification Newsletter.2013 ACTR Illinois/Indiana Regional Olympiada of Spoken Russian.Russian Language Lab – Student Projects.Class Responses to 19th Century Russian Short Fiction.Fall 2013 – 19th Century Russian Short Fiction for teens.Winter/Spring 2014 – Tolstoy’s War and Peace.2014: Summer Workshop: Dostoevsky’s Notes from Underground.Fall 2014: Russian and Soviet History of the First Half of the 20th Century through Literature and Film (1900 – 1920).Winter/Spring 2015: Russian and Soviet History of the First Half of the 20th Century through Literature and Film (1920 – 1940).2015 Summer Workshop: Gogol’s The Government Inspector.2015 Summer Workshop: 19th Century Russian Supernatural Stories.19th Century Russian Short Fiction – Two Semesters in 2015 – 2016.Russian Literature for Teens Fall 2016 through Spring 2017: War and Peace, Oblomov, and Crime and Punishment.Russian Literature for Teens Fall 2017: Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina, Chekhov’s Annas, and Anna Karenina in Film.The Russian Revolution (1900 – 1940) through Literature and Film (Fall 2018-Spring 2019).Winter/Spring 2020: Tolstoy’s War and Peace.19th Century Russian Short Fiction 2020-2021.19th Century Russian Literature and Film Adaptations – Fall 2021 and Winter/Spring 2021 to 2022. Petersburg’s Culture, Myth, and Everyday Life – Fall 2021 and Winter/Spring 2021 to 2022
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