Cleveland Humanities Festival: Remembering War brings together 20 of Northeast Ohio’s cultural institutions for artistic, educational and performance events
- Performing music for Nazis during World War II to avoid execution, Russian/Ukrainian Jewish music prodigy Zhanna Arshanskaya survived and became a prized pianist and music professor. She will of a documentary about her life, followed by a recital.
- —a MacArthur “genius grant” winner—will speak of treating combat veterans with severe psychological injuries using narrative and other literary devices.
- In the Baker-Nord Distinguished Faculty Lecture, John Grabowski will by ϳԹ students to the May 4, 1970 Kent State shootings, in which students staged strikes and blocked traffic on Euclid Avenue—considered by some a brief campus flirtation with radical protest.
- In a , from The Aquila Theatre Company in New York City, military veterans trained in dance and other forms of expression will present pieces that focus on critical social issues, including war, conflict, comradeship, home and family.
- “,” a talk by Pakistani novelist Kamila Shamsie, will explore why armies destroy art and cultural artifacts in times of war.
- A and its continuing ramifications will be led by Richard Hovannisian, a Guggenheim Fellow and professor emeritus at UCLA.
- Cleveland Museum of Art curator the influence of World War II and the Cold War on artists working in the mid-20th century.
- “,” a concert by the Cleveland Institute of Music Orchestra, will be held in the Cleveland Institute of Music’s Kulas Hall and broadcast live on WCLV 104.9.