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DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Comparative Literature\, this event is part of a weeklong series of public programs:
Join the Department today for the screening of &ldquo\;Man with a Movie Camera\,&rdquo\; directed by Dziga Vertov and ranked the 8th greatest film ever made. &ldquo\;In this 1929 documentary\,&rdquo\; IMDb states\, &ldquo\;a man travels around a city with a camera slung over his shoulder\, documenting urban life with dazzling invention.&rdquo\; Seating is limited to the first 30 people.
Additional "Reflecting the Russian Revolution" events include:

Nov. 8\, Guest Lecture! &ldquo\;The Revolution Before the Revolution: The Art Bureau of Nadezhda Dobychina\,&rdquo\; presented by Mimi Ginsberg\, doctoral candidate at the University of Maryland. This event is co-sponsored by the Fine Arts and Comparative Literature Departments. Merrick Hall Room 301 @ 4:15 p.m.
Nov. 9\, Faculty Discussion Panel! &ldquo\;The Bolshevik Revolution of 1917: What Was Good? What Was Bad? Is It Over?&rdquo\; Featuring Professors Mark Gingerich (Russian History)\, Sean Kay (Soviet and Russian Politics and Government)\, and Stephanie Merkel (Russian Language and Literature). Bayley Room in Beeghly Library @ noon.
Nov. 10\, Chat with the Chair! George Sokolsky and the Bolsheviks: &ldquo\;Writing the Revolution: A Granddaughter&rsquo\;s Tale\,&rdquo\; presented by Professor Anne Sokolsky. George Sokolsky was a journalist in China during the turbulent decades of the 1920s and 1930s\, says Professor Sokolsky\, and he later became a syndicated columnist in over 200 newspapers in the United States during the heyday of print journalism. Merrick Hall Room 203 @ noon.

SUMMARY:1917-2017 Reflecting the Russian Revolution: Film Screening
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DTEND:20171108T013000Z
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