• Sessions: 4
    Class Date(s): 11-21-2023 to 12-12-2023
    Day(s) of the week: Tuesday
    Time: 2:00 PM → 3:00 PM
    Instructor: Laurence Britt
    Term: 2023-3
    Location: Oasis Rochester
    REGISTRATION CLOSED
    Nazi Germany vs. Soviet Russia – 1941-1945:  This course will cover the titanic struggle between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union during World War II. The first session will cover the events leading up to the war tracing all the way back to traditional German views of “drang nach osten” and to Hitler’s racialist policies and geo-political... read more
    Nazi Germany vs. Soviet Russia – 1941-1945:  This course will cover the titanic struggle between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union during World War II. The first session will cover the events leading up to the war tracing all the way back to traditional German views of “drang nach osten” and to Hitler’s racialist policies and geo-political ambitions. The strategies and preparations of both sides will be considered along with the context of this event to the totality of World War II. Then the initial clash of the armies to the fall of 1941 will be discussed. The second session will cover the balance of the 1941 campaign up to the German reversal before Moscow in December. The second part of the session will show how the Germans recovered and resumed the offensive in 1942 and reached Stalingrad and the Caucasus and conclude with the German defeat at Stalingrad. The third session will deal with the strategies employed for 1943 by both the Germans and Soviets including the Battle of Kursk and subsequent German retreats to the spring of 1944. The final session of the course will cover the Soviet summer offensive of 1944 and the 1945 drive on Berlin leading to the German surrender. A review of the total campaign will include the reasons for the Soviet victory and German defeat and the implications for the postwar world.  Please register for this class if you plan to join us in person.
  • Sessions: 4
    Class Date(s): 11-21-2023 to 12-12-2023
    Day(s) of the week: Tuesday
    Time: 2:00 PM → 3:00 PM
    Instructor: Laurence Britt
    Term: 2023-3
    Location: Zoom
    REGISTRATION CLOSED
    Nazi Germany vs. Soviet Russia – 1941-1945:  This course will cover the titanic struggle between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union during World War II. The first session will cover the events leading up to the war tracing all the way back to traditional German views of “drang nach osten” and to Hitler’s racialist policies and geo-political... read more
    Nazi Germany vs. Soviet Russia – 1941-1945:  This course will cover the titanic struggle between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union during World War II. The first session will cover the events leading up to the war tracing all the way back to traditional German views of “drang nach osten” and to Hitler’s racialist policies and geo-political ambitions. The strategies and preparations of both sides will be considered along with the context of this event to the totality of World War II. Then the initial clash of the armies to the fall of 1941 will be discussed. The second session will cover the balance of the 1941 campaign up to the German reversal before Moscow in December. The second part of the session will show how the Germans recovered and resumed the offensive in 1942 and reached Stalingrad and the Caucasus and conclude with the German defeat at Stalingrad. The third session will deal with the strategies employed for 1943 by both the Germans and Soviets including the Battle of Kursk and subsequent German retreats to the spring of 1944. The final session of the course will cover the Soviet summer offensive of 1944 and the 1945 drive on Berlin leading to the German surrender. A review of the total campaign will include the reasons for the Soviet victory and German defeat and the implications for the postwar world.  Please register for this class if you plan to join us in person. Please register for this for Zoom only access.  You must have a tablet/phone/computer with audio and video capability.
  • Sessions: 4
    Class Date(s): 05-08-2024 to 05-29-2024
    Day(s) of the week: Wednesday
    Time: 11:00 AM → 12:30 PM
    Instructor: Grace Seiberling, Art Historian
    Term: 2024-2
    Location: Oasis Rochester

    Weaving, embroidery, quiltmaking and other forms of textile production have often been considered as utilitarian or domestic and, in their association with women, less prestigious than painting and other art forms. This four-session class will look at the history of textile production by women and ways in which feminist art history, (such as Rozika... read more

    Weaving, embroidery, quiltmaking and other forms of textile production have often been considered as utilitarian or domestic and, in their association with women, less prestigious than painting and other art forms. This four-session class will look at the history of textile production by women and ways in which feminist art history, (such as Rozika Parker's The Subversive Stitch), and contemporary artists have revisited this history and incorporated textiles into mainstream art. Please register for this class if you plan to join the class in person.

  • Sessions: 4
    Class Date(s): 05-08-2024 to 05-29-2024
    Day(s) of the week: Wednesday
    Time: 11:00 AM → 12:30 PM
    Instructor: Grace Seiberling, Art Historian
    Term: 2024-2
    Location: Zoom

    Weaving, embroidery, quiltmaking and other forms of textile production have often been considered as utilitarian or domestic and, in their association with women, less prestigious than painting and other art forms. This four-session class will look at the history of textile production by women and ways in which feminist art history, (such as Rozika... read more

    Weaving, embroidery, quiltmaking and other forms of textile production have often been considered as utilitarian or domestic and, in their association with women, less prestigious than painting and other art forms. This four-session class will look at the history of textile production by women and ways in which feminist art history, (such as Rozika Parker's The Subversive Stitch), and contemporary artists have revisited this history and incorporated textiles into mainstream art. Please register for this class if you plan to join the class via Zoom.

  • Sessions: 3
    Class Date(s): 06-05-2024 to 06-19-2024
    Day(s) of the week: Wednesday
    Time: 11:00 AM → 12:30 PM
    Instructor: Grace Seiberling, Art Historian
    Term: 2024-2
    Location: Oasis Rochester

    In the late 19th century photographers interested in claiming photography as an art sought to distinguish themselves from the growing number of amateurs by producing distinctive works. At the same time Jacob Riis and Lewis Hine were documenting the slums of New York and child labor, using photography as a catalyst for social reform. Please register for this... read more

    In the late 19th century photographers interested in claiming photography as an art sought to distinguish themselves from the growing number of amateurs by producing distinctive works. At the same time Jacob Riis and Lewis Hine were documenting the slums of New York and child labor, using photography as a catalyst for social reform. Please register for this class if you plan to join the class in person.

  • Sessions: 3
    Class Date(s): 06-05-2024 to 06-19-2024
    Day(s) of the week: Wednesday
    Time: 11:00 AM → 12:30 PM
    Instructor: Grace Seiberling, Art Historian
    Term: 2024-2
    Location: Zoom

    In the late 19th century photographers interested in claiming photography as an art sought to distinguish themselves from the growing number of amateurs by producing distinctive works. At the same time Jacob Riis and Lewis Hine were documenting the slums of New York and child labor, using photography as a catalyst for social reform.  Please register for... read more

    In the late 19th century photographers interested in claiming photography as an art sought to distinguish themselves from the growing number of amateurs by producing distinctive works. At the same time Jacob Riis and Lewis Hine were documenting the slums of New York and child labor, using photography as a catalyst for social reform.  Please register for this class if you plan to access it via Zoom.

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