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An exploration of church and society produced by the United Lutheran Seminary with campuses in Gettysburg and Philadelphia, PA.
Episodes
Wednesday Feb 08, 2017
Taking the Long View: Artist Nick Collier and the Raw Charms of a Gettysburg Winter
Wednesday Feb 08, 2017
Wednesday Feb 08, 2017
Nick Collier, the current Gettysburg National Military Park Artist-in-Residence, speaks with Katy Giebenhain about sculpture, a contemporary twist on an Afghan Box Camera and what it is like to be a veteran spending a month on the iconic Battlefield outside of tourist season.
Monday Jan 16, 2017
After Custer’s Defeat: The Fate of Native Americans in the U.S. and Canada
Monday Jan 16, 2017
Monday Jan 16, 2017
“They won the battle, but lost the war” summarizes Mr. Hutchinson’s approach to the Battle of the Little Big Horn and the route of Custer’s troops. The U.S. persisted in a relentless military campaign to drive the natives into reservations under their control, while the remnant under Sitting Bull found that the Canadian “Mounties” who were both policemen and magistrates stressed cooperation, provided they observe Canadian law.
Friday Dec 02, 2016
Standing on Hallowed Ground
Friday Dec 02, 2016
Friday Dec 02, 2016
A singer-songwriter from Ohio and a photographer-videographer from Alaska come to Gettysburg via Seattle. Michela Miller-Ferree and George Ferree, the latest artists-in-residence at the Gettysburg National Military Park, have covered lots of territory. They bring a shared sense of adventure and respect for Gettysburg’s history to their month-long residency. They stopped by the Seminary campus for a conversation with Katy Giebenhain from Seminary Ridge Review. Hear Michela perform in a fireside concert at the Visitor Center Saturday, December 10, 2016 at 1:00pm in the Refreshment Saloon. The event is free and open to the public.
Monday Oct 10, 2016
The Art and Experience of Wet Plate Photography
Monday Oct 10, 2016
Monday Oct 10, 2016
Photographer Robert Beech discusses the process, challengesand rewards of wet plate photography. During his tenure as Artist in Residence at the Gettysburg NationalMilitary Park, Robert recreated some of the most famous photographs of thebattle using the same technology used by the photographers of the time.
Read Robert Beech's Blog
Monday Jul 04, 2016
Monday Jul 04, 2016
Think you know everything there is to know about the founding of this country? Think again! This year, to celebrate July 4th, listen to this fascinating conversation with Gettysburg College history professor Tim Shannon as he talks about the role of Native Americans during the Revolutionary War, and their varied relationships with the British, the French and the Colonists. Don’t miss the discussion of Jefferson and his views of Native Americans.
Monday Jun 27, 2016
Traces: A Gathering Up
Monday Jun 27, 2016
Monday Jun 27, 2016
Sculptor Marlene Alt and Katy Giebenhain from Seminary Ridge Review talk about Alt’s sited sculpture outside the National Park Service Museum and Visitor Center in Gettysburg. “Traces: A Gathering Up” features wax imprints of horse hooves. How do we pay tribute? What is the difference between land and home? How can we imagine the scope of the Battle of Gettysburg? Aside from human casualties there were over 1,000 horses and mules killed here. Alt describes her installation project and her approach to other historical themes in her artwork. She is the May-June 2016 Artist-in-Residence at the Gettysburg National Military Park.
Monday Feb 01, 2016
The Kinship of War and Poetry
Monday Feb 01, 2016
Monday Feb 01, 2016
Friday Dec 04, 2015
Syria is Serious Business
Friday Dec 04, 2015
Friday Dec 04, 2015
Dennis F. Carter, Career Foreign Service Officer, Department of State addresses several important questions: How is the U.S. and the United Nations handling the refugee crisis? Is there reason to fear the influx of Syrian refugees? What religious ideology drives Isis to detest the “secular state”? Why does Russia support the Assad regime?
Monday Oct 26, 2015
The Cost of War: Yugoslavia
Monday Oct 26, 2015
Monday Oct 26, 2015
Monday Sep 21, 2015
Gettysburg: The Quest for Meaning
Monday Sep 21, 2015
Monday Sep 21, 2015
Dr. Leonard Hummel, Co-editor of Gettysburg: The Quest for Meaning, discusses the new book, published by Seminary Ridge Press and its purpose: to examine religion and the Civil War, including the Bible and slavery, ghost tours and pilgrims, the “lost cause” of the Confederacy, forgetting and remembering why it started, and how all this informs our search for a just and equitable America.