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** We Still Have Room -- Register online! **
The Power of the Humanities: Why They Matter
VHC Fall Conference
November 11-12, 2011 Stoweflake Mountain Resort and Spa, Stowe, Vermont The humanities "reveal how people have tried to make moral, spiritual, and intellectual sense of a world in which irrationality, despair, loneliness, and death are as conspicuous as birth, friendship, hope, and reason."  According to the 1980 Rockefeller Commission, the humanities are how we come to terms with those poles of the human experience, and how we reconcile our better angels with our fears and failures. And yet increasingly the humanities are under attack, in part because of the difficulty in measuring their utility in quantifiable -- even economic -- terms.
At a time in which the value of the humanities is not broadly understood, and even called into question, we invite you to join us in exploring and experiencing the power of literature, history, an understanding of the arts, the study of religion, and the other humanities disciplines. In the process, we'll seek to come to a keener understanding of how and why the humanities matter -- to both individuals and society. Featuring
- James Cuno, president and CEO of the J. Paul Getty Trust on the role of art museums in preserving and transmitting culture.
- Richard Kogan, MD with a one-of-a-kind lecture-performance linking stories of Beethoven's life with exquisitely performed excerpts from Beethoven's work. (Tickets to this event are also available to those not attending the conference as a whole.)
- Dr. John Stauffer, chair of the Program in the History of American Civilization at Harvard University, on the American Civil War and American racial history.
- Diana Eck, professor of Comparative Religion and Indian Studies at Harvard University, on the significance and the challenges of understanding religious beliefs and practices across cultures.
- Breakout sessions on a variety of topics:
- Civic Reflection through Reading and Discussion
- How Primary Sources Reveal Why History Matters
- Religious Pluralism in America
- The Power of Literature to Help and to Heal
- The Promise and Challenges of Art Museums in the Contemporary World
- The Public Humanities in America:
A Movement and Its Meanings - Welfare Brat: Literature Changing Lives
- Why Do the Humanities Matter to You?
Learn more and register online today!
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A Sampling of Events Statewide
Addison County
November 2 - A Heritage in Stone. Expanding a presentation on the culture of the granite industry, historian John Johnson adds historical and social perspective to the marble and slate industries in Vermont. From the stone quarries to the production sheds to the immigrant workers, this survey is a historical view of the ethnicity of cultural groups, industrialization, labor unions, technology, artistic expression and environmental changes. Shoreham Historical Society, 7:00 pm. Virginia Spadaccini, (802) 897-5254. October 23 - To Kill a Mockingbird Film Presentation and Discussion. A Vermont Reads Event. Alden Graves, film critic and columnist for The Bennington Banner presents a talk about the 1962 film To Kill a Mockingbird and related themes at 2:00 p.m. The film will be shown at 2:30 p.m. Light refreshments will be served. Bennington Free Library Rotary Room, 2:00 pm. Karson Kiesinger, (802) 442-7062. Caledonia County
October 25 - To Kill a Mockingbird Community Book Discussion. A Vermont Reads Event. Facilitated by members of the St. Johnsbury Community Justice Center. St. Johnsbury Athenaeum, 3:00 pm. Lisa von Kann, (802) 748-8291 x301. October 19 - Book Discussion: The Seven Deadly Sins Sampler. Part of the Seven Deadly Sins Sampler series. Discover why, according to Dartmouth professor of ethics and human values Ronald M. Green, these short stories "remind us that most of our problems arise in the hidden recesses of the human heart." Led by Merilyn Burrington. South Burlington Community Library, 7:00 pm. Louise J. Murphy, (802) 652-7076. There are no events scheduled in Essex County at this time. If you would like to see a VHC event hosted there, please contact your library, historical society, or another nonprofit about hosting a Speakers Bureau, Reading and Discussion, or Vermont Reads program! November 1 - A Sense of Place: Vermont's Farm Legacy. The character of a place is shaped by its cultural heritage and folklife and the informal traditions of family and community that guide the ways in which a person plans a meal, treats a neighbor, or understands civic responsibility. In Vermont the cultural legacy of farming has strongly influenced the identity of Vermonters, and it is these distinctive traditions, which have persisted even with the decline in farm numbers, that help make the state unique. Gregory Sharrow explores the fabric of farm culture in the past and probes its relationship to the world of Vermont today. Fairfax Community Library, 6:30 pm. Chantal Marlinski, (802) 849-2420. October 26 - Book Discussion: The Snow Leopard by Peter Mathiessen. Part of the Pilgrimage series. Human beings have undertaken pilgrimages of all kinds for thousands of years. Discover a variety of journeys -- and whether the seekers find what they are looking for -- in these varied writings. Led by Arthur W Biddle. South Hero Community Library, 75 South St, 7:00 pm. Diana Cleborne, (802) 372-6209. Lamoille County November 10 - The Group of Seven. Canada's regions create an artistic mosaic with their diversity: the Maritimes, Rockies, Plains, Old Quebec, First Nations, and more. Inspired by Thom Thomson, Canada's unique artists (known as The Group of Seven) felt that Canadians would recognize themselves if they saw the beauty of their landscape. This program presents their works with many slides, video clips, and commentary by Dr. William Tortolano. Stowe, Helen Day Art Center, 6:00 pm. Nathan Suter, (802) 253-8358. November 13 - Agatha Christie: Creator of Miss Jane Marple and Hercule Poirot. In this living history performance by Helene Lang, Ms. Christie tells you how a typewriter in Torguay spawned over eighty mysteries and created Miss Jane Marple and Hercule Poirot. Learn about her life and walk in her footsteps in England. Discover why she was so knowledgeable about the poisons used in her stories; what influences in her life informed the creation of her famous leading detectives; some personal information about her family; and why she went to Yorkshire under an assumed name. Newbury, Tenney Memorial Library, 2:00 pm. Marjorie Shane, (802) 866-5366.
October 24 - Book Discussion: American Sphinx: The Character of Thomas Jefferson by Joseph Ellis. Part of the Founding Fathers series. The founding fathers loom large in the history books, but who were these people really? This series removes the pedestal from beneath these historical luminaries to examine their full humanity -- heroic and flawed, witty and scandalous, compassionate and sly, inventive and insecure, brilliant and brash. Led by Jon Margolis. Glover Public Library, 6:00 pm. Toni Eubanks, (802) 525-6524. October 20 - Susan B. Anthony -- The Invincible! The feisty activist comes to life -- circulating petitions, getting arrested, and challenging legislators, presidents, and newsmen -- in Sally Matson's spirited performance. Although Anthony received a marriage proposal from a wealthy Vermont widower, she turned down all proposals and spent her life on the road, campaigning for abolition, women's rights, and woman suffrage. Letters, speeches, and diaries reveal her wit and intellect as she deals with angry mobs, trips through the West, the Civil War, the 15th Amendment and famous contemporaries such as Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucy Stone, William Lloyd Garrison, and Horace Greeley. Pawlet Community Church, 7:30 pm. Stephen T. Williams, (802) 645-9529.
October 23 - Domestic Violence: Struggles and Successes. A Vermont Reads Event. During a panel discussion and light lunch, Vermont experts will discuss domestic violence issues that are spot-lighted in the book To Kill a Mockingbird. One focus will be domestic violence statistics in Vermont. Warren United Church, 11:45 am. Gail Hietzker, (802) 583-1935. October 23 - Porter Thayer Digitization Project. Porter Thayer, a lifelong resident of Williamsville, immortalized the area in the photographs he took between 1906 and 1920 -- images so popular that more than 1,000 of his postcards were sold at the Williams store over a six-month period. Jessica Weitz, in conjunction with the UVM Center for Digital Initiatives, and VHC scholar Forrest Holzapfel will describe the effort to digitize Thayer's 1,300 photographs. Presented by Brooks Memorial Library and supported by a Vermont Humanities Council grant. Townshend Historical Society, 3:00 pm. Jess Weitz, (802) 251-9960.
October 21 - Vermont Reads 2011 Friday Night Film Series: In the Heat of the Night. This film provides a fascinating look at the strained relationship between a racist Southern cop (Rod Steiger) and a black detective (Sidney Poitier) from Philadelphia, who are involved in the same murder case. Norman Jewison's film was one of the first to explore the sensitive issue of the color line in the South. But, first and foremost, In The Heat Of The Night is a tense, taut, entertaining thriller. Not rated/1967. Hartland Public Library, 7:00 pm. Amy McMullen, (802) 436-2473.
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The Vermont Humanities Council presents more than 1,200 events every year. Thank you for your interest in lifelong learning!
Sincerely, |
Sylvia Plumb, Director of Communications Vermont Humanities Council |
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