Columbia University in the City of New York

Harriman Institute

Events
All Day

The Untold Stories of Russian History

Harriman Institute Atrium 12th floor International Affairs Building, 420 W 118th St, New York

This exhibition consists of twenty-three original works by Mikhail Magaril, including painting, relief, sculpture, graphic works and collages that reflect the main theme of his work; namely, the traumatic experience of an atmosphere of fear in the Stalinist USSR as seen through the eyes of a child. For Magaril, the artistic process is a way to overcome fear and horror. The use of irony, laughter and mockery help to debunk the "greatness" and "holiness" of tyrants of the past and present.

Dialogues on War: Kateryna Mikhalitsyna and Michael Katakis

Online

Please join us for an episode of the Dialogues on War / Діалоги про війну series organized by PEN Ukraine, featuring poet and writer Kateryna Mikhalitsyna in conversation with author writer and photographer Michael Katakis.

Book Panel. Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment: A Reader’s Guide by Deborah Martinsen

Online

The Harriman Institute, together with the North American Dostoevsky Society and Academic Studies Press, will host a roundtable discussion to celebrate the publication of Deborah Martinsen’s Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment: A Reader’s Guide (2022). With speakers Katherine Bowers (University of British Columbia), Erica Drennan (Barnard College), Kate Holland (University of Toronto), Greta Matzner-Gore (University of Southern California), Ronald Meyer (Harriman Institute) and Marcia Morris (Georgetown University).

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