Humanities on Demand

Apr 7 2009

Sarah Caldwell and Prokofiev’s War and Peace

James MorganJames T. Morgan was a long-time friend and colleague at The Opera Company of Boston of the late Sarah Caldwell, the most innovative opera director of mid-20th-century America and the first woman to conduct at the Metropolitan Opera. He worked with Caldwell on a production of the War and Peace opera by Sergei Prokofiev (pictured at right), which he described in this Winter Weekend talk. Morgan moved to Maine in 1999 and became director of development and marketing for PCA Great Performances. He now serves on its board and the board of the Bowdoin International Music Festival. He lives in Freeport.

This talk was part of the Winter Weekend seminar on Tolstoy’s War and Peace in March 2009.


Apr 7 2009

Tolstoy and the Broken Body

Charles CalhounCharles Calhoun is an independent historian and biographer who is Scholar in Residence at the Maine Humanities Council. He is working on books about Longfellow and Whitman in Civil War Washington and on the history of horsemanship in North America. Born in Monroe, Louisiana, he studied history at the University of Virginia and law at Christ Church, Oxford; he now lives in Dorchester, Massachusetts. Here, he discusses the death of Prince Andrei, with reference to other deaths in other wars.

This talk was part of the Winter Weekend seminar on Tolstoy’s War and Peace in March 2009. Download the related handout as a Word document.


Mar 16 2009

Shall We Dance? A Close Reading

Sheila McCarthySheila McCarthy is Associate Professor of Russian at Colby College. She has a B.A. in Russian from Emmanuel College, an M.A. from Harvard in Russian Area Studies, and a Ph.D. from Cornell University in Russian literature. She teaches 19th-century Russian literature in Russian and in English. Here, she performs a close reading of three dance scenes in War and Peace as a way of exploring Tolstoy’s opinion of art.

This talk was part of the Winter Weekend seminar on Tolstoy’s War and Peace in March 2009.


Mar 16 2009

Love and War in War and Peace

Justin WeirJustin Weir is Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures at Harvard University. He received a B.A. in Russian from the University of Minnesota and his master’s and doctoral degree in Russian literature from Northwestern University. He is co-editor and co-translator of Eight Twentieth-Century Russian Plays (2000) and author of The Author as Hero: Self and Tradition in Bulgakov, Pasternak, and Nabokov (2002). His book Leo Tolstoy and the Alibi of Narrative is due out from Yale University Press in spring 2010.

This talk was part of the Winter Weekend seminar on Tolstoy’s War and Peace in March 2009.


 

Please be aware that the content in these audio files does not necessarily reflect the views, opinions, or policies of the Maine Humanities Council or any organization with which the Maine Humanities Council is affiliated. Any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in the podcast do not necessarily reflect those of the National Endowment for the Humanities.