Archive for the 'Summer School' Category

Summer School 2010: The Anglo-Saxons

The Rockford Institute, publisher of Chronicles, presents the Thirteenth Annual Summer School:

Arthur and Alfred: The Anglo-Saxons
Rockford, Illinois • July 6-11, 2010

Theme

Only a few Americans know that Hengist and Horsa were the legendary chiefs who led the Anglo-Saxon invasion of Britain, but Thomas Jefferson wanted to put the pair on the Great Seal of the United States.   Continue Reading »

The American West: An Invitation to Summer School in Rockford

[Click here for more registration information, or call (800) 383-0680 to register today.]

When I was growing up, Masterpiece Theater was standard Sunday-night fare on our 13-inch color Zenith.  We also watched Monty Python and Mystery.  It is not that we never watched American programs, but we believed that Brits had it all over us when it came to television.  You can imagine my surprise when my family visited London in 1978.  The rage over there was a brand new show called Dallas, and the girl behind the front desk at our hotel was nonplussed on learning I had never seen an episode.  I later understood that European enthusiasm for American pop culture becomes full-blown fascination when the topic is even remotely associated with the American West.  Over the years, I’ve met Europeans who, while praising John Ford films, argue that the brutal life of America’s inner cities is a legacy of our “lawless frontier.”

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The American West: Summer School 2009

Join us in Rockford, Illinois, the headquarters of Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture, for The Rockford Institute’s 12th Annual Summer School: “The American West.”

Theme

Robert Frost held that Americans only became American in the process of fighting wars and moving west.  So much of the American identity, in fact, finds its origins in the frontier experience, that the mythology that resulted thrived in fiction and film long after the frontier disappeared.  The stories from “America’s Homeric age” are tales of conflict: the conflict of man against nature, of course, but also the North-South conflict explored in Owen Wister’s The Virginian and played out in the real-life escapades of the Jameses and Youngers and in the Gunfight at the OK Corral.  Films such as High Noon, Shane, and The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance explore the conflict between families establishing communities and the individualism and anarchy of bold and rootless men escaping their past.  Finally, a more thorough understanding of the American identity can come from consideration of ethnic conflicts in the West and of conflicting religious visions.  Alongside all of these are the gunfighters, gamblers, con artists, and gold-mining millionaires, and the writers and humorists who have grappled with the West and contributed to its legends: Bret Harte, Owen Wister, Mark Twain, Frederick Jackson Turner, Francis Parkman, and Robert Louis Stevenson. Continue Reading »

Summer School 2008: The Crusades

CrusaderThe story of the Crusades is one of idealism and courage but also of greed and treachery, of chivalrous Christian knights, cynical Norman warlords, and self-seeking Venetian merchants. Within the gaudy pageant, there are more than enough heroes and plenty of villains, but the current attack on the Crusades as nothing more than European imperialism and looting expeditions is a reflection of multiculturalism, whose true name is Western self-hatred. If you like great stories of high adventure, appreciate brilliant writing and profound theology, then you will not want to miss this Summer School. Continue Reading »

Reading List for “The Stuarts and the English Revolution”

Find out what this year’s reading list is, after the jump. Continue Reading »

Tenth Annual Summer School

Summer School studentsJoin Chronicles editors Thomas Fleming, Scott P. Richert, and Aaron D. Wolf, Rockford Institute Vice President Christopher Check, and special guests Fr. Hugh Barbour, O.Praem., Prior of Saint Michael’s Abbey, Silverado, California; Dr. Donald Livingston, Professor of philosophy at Emory University; Dr. James Patrick, Chancellor of the College of Saint Thomas More in Fort Worth, Texas, on July 10-15, 2007, in Rockford, Illinois, as we take up the topic: “The Stuarts and the English Revolution.” Continue Reading »