Posts from the ‘online classes’ Category
- 011.30.25At the Newberry in 2026: Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov
- 07.24.25Fall 2025 at the Newberry: Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment and Eugene Vodolazkin’s The Aviator
- 04.6.25This Summer at the Newberry! Reading Russian Icons: From Byzantine Roots to Post-Soviet Context
- 011.2.24Adult education classes to be listed on the Newberry’s website on December 13; registration begins on January 22, 2025
- 010.22.24At the Newberry in 2025: Tolstoy’s “War and Peace” Part II and Alexievich’s “The Unwomanly Face of War”
- 09.10.24Coming in October: New Live, Online Course at Roundtable by The 92nd Street Y, New York
- 07.25.24This Fall at the Newberry: Tolstoy’s “War and Peace” Part I and Durova’s “The Cavalry Maiden”
- 04.11.24Register for Newberry course “Dostoevsky’s Short Fiction and Film Adaptations” starting May 22, 2024
- 03.25.24At the Newberry, Summer 2024: Dostoevsky’s Short Fiction and Film Adaptations
- 01.16.24Register for Newberry Courses on January 17, 2024, starting 9:00am CT
- 011.16.23Announcing Newberry Adult Education Classes for 2024
- 07.13.23Registration begins August 23, 2023 for Newberry Course “New Soviet Women: History, Art, Fiction, and Film (1917-1940)”
- 03.31.23Registration begins on May 24 , 2023 for Newberry Class “Understanding Ukraine through Contemporary Literature”
- 011.28.22Newberry Adult Education Course for 2023 – Focus on Ukraine: Gogol’s Ukrainian Tales, Babel’s Odessa Stories, and Bulgakov’s White Guard
- 08.4.22Registration opens August 24, 2022 for Newberry Seminar From Russian Folk Epics and Holy Fools to Putin’s Propaganda
- 07.2.22Fall 2022 at the Newberry: From Russian Folk Epics and Holy Fools to Putin’s Propaganda
- 03.16.22Summer of 2022 at the Newberry – Mikhail Vrubel: Fusion of Art and Literature
- 04.4.21Teen Literature Course for Fall 2021 and Spring 2022: 19th Century Russian Literature and Film Adaptations
- 04.3.21New and Unique Online Course for Fall of 2021 through Spring of 2022 – Russian History from Peter the Great to the 1910s: St. Petersburg’s Culture, Myth, and Everyday Life
- 03.27.21Stella S. creates animation for “Baggage” by Samuil Marshak
- 05.2.20Announcing Teen Online Course for 2020-2021: 19th Century Russian Short Fiction
- 04.30.18Leah A’s Interpretation of «Вот какой рассеянный»
- 03.30.18Students’ Interpretations of «Вот какой рассеянный»
- 01.29.18Online class for teens starting in September, 2018: The Russian Revolution (1900 – 1940) through Literature and Film
- 07.17.17New Format: Synchronous and Asynchronous Classroom for Fall 2017 Russian Lit Online

