March 2024

Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
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  • SIMONE WEIL: GRAVITY AND GRACE
2
3
4
5
  • THE REALITY OF THE POEM: A WORKSHOP & CRAFT CLASS
  • Weekly Workshop
6
7
8
  • SIMONE WEIL: GRAVITY AND GRACE
9
10
11
12
  • THE REALITY OF THE POEM: A WORKSHOP & CRAFT CLASS
  • Weekly Workshop
13
14
15
  • SIMONE WEIL: GRAVITY AND GRACE
16
17
18
19
  • Weekly Workshop
20
21
22
  • SIMONE WEIL: GRAVITY AND GRACE
23
  • Beyond the Canvas: Expanding Ekphrasis
24
25
26
  • Weekly Workshop
27
28
29
  • SIMONE WEIL: GRAVITY AND GRACE
30
31
March 29, 2024
  • SIMONE WEIL: GRAVITY AND GRACE

    March 29, 2024  12:00 pm - 2:30 pm

    ONLINE/VIRTUAL. More details: https://classroom.ruthstonehouse.org/product/simone-weil-gravity-and-grace/

    In this class, we will read and write our way through Weil’s personal notes, brought together under the title Gravity and Grace. These writings take on Simone’s thoughts on friendship, politics, love, mysticism, organized religion, prayer, and much more. We will also write poems in response to the readings, and workshop together in a group setting.

    See more details

April 2, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    April 2, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

April 3, 2024
  • OF MYTHS, OF TALES, OF… MAKING AND MYTHING IN VERSE

    April 3, 2024  6:00 pm - 8:00 pm

    More details: https://classroom.ruthstonehouse.org/product/of-myths-of-tales-of-making-and-mything-in-verse/

    How do we craft verse to create a world of myth? In what ways can we take the myths or fairy tales that impacted our childhoods and engage them in our own re-making?

     

    Whether we are talking about Robin Coste Lewis’s, Voyage of the Sable Venus, a work that creates a universe of seeing through an interrogation of very real museum/cultural archives – thousands of years old – of the Black body across time, or Helen Ivory’s Waiting for Bluebeard, a work that reshapes the well known tale about Bluebeard to navigate the complex terrain of gender, sexaulity and trauma, the world building and creating is evident within these verses. And within what I call my interpretation, interrogation and conversation with Ovid, my second book of poetry, Black Metamorphoses, co-exists within a long history of engagement with Ovidian and Greek mythology. I’ve also engaged in myth making for my ongoing multimedia work and exhibition, Dark Goddess.

    See more details

April 9, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    April 9, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

April 10, 2024
  • OF MYTHS, OF TALES, OF… MAKING AND MYTHING IN VERSE

    April 10, 2024  6:00 pm - 8:00 pm

    More details: https://classroom.ruthstonehouse.org/product/of-myths-of-tales-of-making-and-mything-in-verse/

    How do we craft verse to create a world of myth? In what ways can we take the myths or fairy tales that impacted our childhoods and engage them in our own re-making?

     

    Whether we are talking about Robin Coste Lewis’s, Voyage of the Sable Venus, a work that creates a universe of seeing through an interrogation of very real museum/cultural archives – thousands of years old – of the Black body across time, or Helen Ivory’s Waiting for Bluebeard, a work that reshapes the well known tale about Bluebeard to navigate the complex terrain of gender, sexaulity and trauma, the world building and creating is evident within these verses. And within what I call my interpretation, interrogation and conversation with Ovid, my second book of poetry, Black Metamorphoses, co-exists within a long history of engagement with Ovidian and Greek mythology. I’ve also engaged in myth making for my ongoing multimedia work and exhibition, Dark Goddess.

    See more details

April 16, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    April 16, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

April 17, 2024
  • OF MYTHS, OF TALES, OF… MAKING AND MYTHING IN VERSE

    April 17, 2024  6:00 pm - 8:00 pm

    More details: https://classroom.ruthstonehouse.org/product/of-myths-of-tales-of-making-and-mything-in-verse/

    How do we craft verse to create a world of myth? In what ways can we take the myths or fairy tales that impacted our childhoods and engage them in our own re-making?

     

    Whether we are talking about Robin Coste Lewis’s, Voyage of the Sable Venus, a work that creates a universe of seeing through an interrogation of very real museum/cultural archives – thousands of years old – of the Black body across time, or Helen Ivory’s Waiting for Bluebeard, a work that reshapes the well known tale about Bluebeard to navigate the complex terrain of gender, sexaulity and trauma, the world building and creating is evident within these verses. And within what I call my interpretation, interrogation and conversation with Ovid, my second book of poetry, Black Metamorphoses, co-exists within a long history of engagement with Ovidian and Greek mythology. I’ve also engaged in myth making for my ongoing multimedia work and exhibition, Dark Goddess.

    See more details

April 23, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    April 23, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

April 24, 2024
  • OF MYTHS, OF TALES, OF… MAKING AND MYTHING IN VERSE

    April 24, 2024  6:00 pm - 8:00 pm

    More details: https://classroom.ruthstonehouse.org/product/of-myths-of-tales-of-making-and-mything-in-verse/

    How do we craft verse to create a world of myth? In what ways can we take the myths or fairy tales that impacted our childhoods and engage them in our own re-making?

     

    Whether we are talking about Robin Coste Lewis’s, Voyage of the Sable Venus, a work that creates a universe of seeing through an interrogation of very real museum/cultural archives – thousands of years old – of the Black body across time, or Helen Ivory’s Waiting for Bluebeard, a work that reshapes the well known tale about Bluebeard to navigate the complex terrain of gender, sexaulity and trauma, the world building and creating is evident within these verses. And within what I call my interpretation, interrogation and conversation with Ovid, my second book of poetry, Black Metamorphoses, co-exists within a long history of engagement with Ovidian and Greek mythology. I’ve also engaged in myth making for my ongoing multimedia work and exhibition, Dark Goddess.

    See more details

April 30, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    April 30, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

May 1, 2024
  • Teachers Who Write Conference

    May 1, 2024  9:00 am - 2:30 pm
    Willowell Foundation, Bristol Rd, Monkton, VT 05469, USA

    The Vermont Council of Teachers of English and Language Arts and Ruth Stone House present:
    The Annual Teachers Who Write Conference.


    More details here: https://classroom.ruthstonehouse.org/class/teachers-who-write/

    See more details

  • OF MYTHS, OF TALES, OF… MAKING AND MYTHING IN VERSE

    May 1, 2024  6:00 pm - 8:00 pm

    More details: https://classroom.ruthstonehouse.org/product/of-myths-of-tales-of-making-and-mything-in-verse/

    How do we craft verse to create a world of myth? In what ways can we take the myths or fairy tales that impacted our childhoods and engage them in our own re-making?

     

    Whether we are talking about Robin Coste Lewis’s, Voyage of the Sable Venus, a work that creates a universe of seeing through an interrogation of very real museum/cultural archives – thousands of years old – of the Black body across time, or Helen Ivory’s Waiting for Bluebeard, a work that reshapes the well known tale about Bluebeard to navigate the complex terrain of gender, sexaulity and trauma, the world building and creating is evident within these verses. And within what I call my interpretation, interrogation and conversation with Ovid, my second book of poetry, Black Metamorphoses, co-exists within a long history of engagement with Ovidian and Greek mythology. I’ve also engaged in myth making for my ongoing multimedia work and exhibition, Dark Goddess.

    See more details

May 2, 2024
  • DIVINE GIFTS AND THEIR TERRIBLE COST: READING EMILY WILSON’S NEW TRANSLATION OF THE ILIAD

    May 2, 2024  6:00 pm - 8:30 pm

    More details: https://classroom.ruthstonehouse.org/product/divine-gifts-and-their-terrible-cost-reading-emily-wilsons-new-translation-of-the-iliad/

    The famous god whose legs are bent replied,

    ‘Take heart, dispel these worries from your mind.

    I wish that I could hide him far away

    from cruel death when harsh fate comes for him

    as easily as I can make him armor

    so marvelous that any human being

    would be astonished at the sight.’

                                  —The Iliad, Book 18

    Emily Wilson opens the introduction to her thrilling new translation of The Iliad by explaining that it “tells two interwoven stories across its twenty-four books. The first describes the overwhelming anger of a Greek warrior, Achilles, and its catastrophic consequences. The second tell how a brave Trojan warrior, Hector, leave his city and family to attack the Greek invaders—and returns home only after death. […] The beautiful word minunthadios, ‘short-lived,’ is used for both Achilles and Hector, and applies to all of us. We die too soon, and there is no adequate recompense for the terrible, inevitable loss of life. Yet through poetry, the words, actions, and feelings of some long-ago brief lives may be remembered even three thousand years later.”

     

    In this class, we will gain a better understanding of not only these two interwoven stories, but also what the epic poem has to say about its sprawling cast of humans and gods, fate, power, war, love, justice, and more. Focus will be given to the narrative, poetic technique, and the translation itself. We will cover 4 books of the epic per class over the course of 6 weeks and supplement our discussion with the following incisive secondary sources:

     

    “The Iliad, or The Poem of Force” by Simone Weil

    “The Iliad as Ethical Thinking: Politics, Pity, And The Operation Of Esteem” by Dean Hammer

    “The Poetics of Loss in Greek Epic” by Sheila Murnaghan

    “Bitch that I Am”: Self-Blame and Self- Assertion in the Iliad” by Ruby Blondell

    See more details

May 7, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    May 7, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

May 9, 2024
  • DIVINE GIFTS AND THEIR TERRIBLE COST: READING EMILY WILSON’S NEW TRANSLATION OF THE ILIAD

    May 9, 2024  6:00 pm - 8:30 pm

    More details: https://classroom.ruthstonehouse.org/product/divine-gifts-and-their-terrible-cost-reading-emily-wilsons-new-translation-of-the-iliad/

    The famous god whose legs are bent replied,

    ‘Take heart, dispel these worries from your mind.

    I wish that I could hide him far away

    from cruel death when harsh fate comes for him

    as easily as I can make him armor

    so marvelous that any human being

    would be astonished at the sight.’

                                  —The Iliad, Book 18

    Emily Wilson opens the introduction to her thrilling new translation of The Iliad by explaining that it “tells two interwoven stories across its twenty-four books. The first describes the overwhelming anger of a Greek warrior, Achilles, and its catastrophic consequences. The second tell how a brave Trojan warrior, Hector, leave his city and family to attack the Greek invaders—and returns home only after death. […] The beautiful word minunthadios, ‘short-lived,’ is used for both Achilles and Hector, and applies to all of us. We die too soon, and there is no adequate recompense for the terrible, inevitable loss of life. Yet through poetry, the words, actions, and feelings of some long-ago brief lives may be remembered even three thousand years later.”

     

    In this class, we will gain a better understanding of not only these two interwoven stories, but also what the epic poem has to say about its sprawling cast of humans and gods, fate, power, war, love, justice, and more. Focus will be given to the narrative, poetic technique, and the translation itself. We will cover 4 books of the epic per class over the course of 6 weeks and supplement our discussion with the following incisive secondary sources:

     

    “The Iliad, or The Poem of Force” by Simone Weil

    “The Iliad as Ethical Thinking: Politics, Pity, And The Operation Of Esteem” by Dean Hammer

    “The Poetics of Loss in Greek Epic” by Sheila Murnaghan

    “Bitch that I Am”: Self-Blame and Self- Assertion in the Iliad” by Ruby Blondell

    See more details

May 14, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    May 14, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

May 16, 2024
  • DIVINE GIFTS AND THEIR TERRIBLE COST: READING EMILY WILSON’S NEW TRANSLATION OF THE ILIAD

    May 16, 2024  6:00 pm - 8:30 pm

    More details: https://classroom.ruthstonehouse.org/product/divine-gifts-and-their-terrible-cost-reading-emily-wilsons-new-translation-of-the-iliad/

    The famous god whose legs are bent replied,

    ‘Take heart, dispel these worries from your mind.

    I wish that I could hide him far away

    from cruel death when harsh fate comes for him

    as easily as I can make him armor

    so marvelous that any human being

    would be astonished at the sight.’

                                  —The Iliad, Book 18

    Emily Wilson opens the introduction to her thrilling new translation of The Iliad by explaining that it “tells two interwoven stories across its twenty-four books. The first describes the overwhelming anger of a Greek warrior, Achilles, and its catastrophic consequences. The second tell how a brave Trojan warrior, Hector, leave his city and family to attack the Greek invaders—and returns home only after death. […] The beautiful word minunthadios, ‘short-lived,’ is used for both Achilles and Hector, and applies to all of us. We die too soon, and there is no adequate recompense for the terrible, inevitable loss of life. Yet through poetry, the words, actions, and feelings of some long-ago brief lives may be remembered even three thousand years later.”

     

    In this class, we will gain a better understanding of not only these two interwoven stories, but also what the epic poem has to say about its sprawling cast of humans and gods, fate, power, war, love, justice, and more. Focus will be given to the narrative, poetic technique, and the translation itself. We will cover 4 books of the epic per class over the course of 6 weeks and supplement our discussion with the following incisive secondary sources:

     

    “The Iliad, or The Poem of Force” by Simone Weil

    “The Iliad as Ethical Thinking: Politics, Pity, And The Operation Of Esteem” by Dean Hammer

    “The Poetics of Loss in Greek Epic” by Sheila Murnaghan

    “Bitch that I Am”: Self-Blame and Self- Assertion in the Iliad” by Ruby Blondell

    See more details

May 21, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    May 21, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

May 23, 2024
  • DIVINE GIFTS AND THEIR TERRIBLE COST: READING EMILY WILSON’S NEW TRANSLATION OF THE ILIAD

    May 23, 2024  6:00 pm - 8:30 pm

    More details: https://classroom.ruthstonehouse.org/product/divine-gifts-and-their-terrible-cost-reading-emily-wilsons-new-translation-of-the-iliad/

    The famous god whose legs are bent replied,

    ‘Take heart, dispel these worries from your mind.

    I wish that I could hide him far away

    from cruel death when harsh fate comes for him

    as easily as I can make him armor

    so marvelous that any human being

    would be astonished at the sight.’

                                  —The Iliad, Book 18

    Emily Wilson opens the introduction to her thrilling new translation of The Iliad by explaining that it “tells two interwoven stories across its twenty-four books. The first describes the overwhelming anger of a Greek warrior, Achilles, and its catastrophic consequences. The second tell how a brave Trojan warrior, Hector, leave his city and family to attack the Greek invaders—and returns home only after death. […] The beautiful word minunthadios, ‘short-lived,’ is used for both Achilles and Hector, and applies to all of us. We die too soon, and there is no adequate recompense for the terrible, inevitable loss of life. Yet through poetry, the words, actions, and feelings of some long-ago brief lives may be remembered even three thousand years later.”

     

    In this class, we will gain a better understanding of not only these two interwoven stories, but also what the epic poem has to say about its sprawling cast of humans and gods, fate, power, war, love, justice, and more. Focus will be given to the narrative, poetic technique, and the translation itself. We will cover 4 books of the epic per class over the course of 6 weeks and supplement our discussion with the following incisive secondary sources:

     

    “The Iliad, or The Poem of Force” by Simone Weil

    “The Iliad as Ethical Thinking: Politics, Pity, And The Operation Of Esteem” by Dean Hammer

    “The Poetics of Loss in Greek Epic” by Sheila Murnaghan

    “Bitch that I Am”: Self-Blame and Self- Assertion in the Iliad” by Ruby Blondell

    See more details

May 28, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    May 28, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

May 30, 2024
  • DIVINE GIFTS AND THEIR TERRIBLE COST: READING EMILY WILSON’S NEW TRANSLATION OF THE ILIAD

    May 30, 2024  6:00 pm - 8:30 pm

    More details: https://classroom.ruthstonehouse.org/product/divine-gifts-and-their-terrible-cost-reading-emily-wilsons-new-translation-of-the-iliad/

    The famous god whose legs are bent replied,

    ‘Take heart, dispel these worries from your mind.

    I wish that I could hide him far away

    from cruel death when harsh fate comes for him

    as easily as I can make him armor

    so marvelous that any human being

    would be astonished at the sight.’

                                  —The Iliad, Book 18

    Emily Wilson opens the introduction to her thrilling new translation of The Iliad by explaining that it “tells two interwoven stories across its twenty-four books. The first describes the overwhelming anger of a Greek warrior, Achilles, and its catastrophic consequences. The second tell how a brave Trojan warrior, Hector, leave his city and family to attack the Greek invaders—and returns home only after death. […] The beautiful word minunthadios, ‘short-lived,’ is used for both Achilles and Hector, and applies to all of us. We die too soon, and there is no adequate recompense for the terrible, inevitable loss of life. Yet through poetry, the words, actions, and feelings of some long-ago brief lives may be remembered even three thousand years later.”

     

    In this class, we will gain a better understanding of not only these two interwoven stories, but also what the epic poem has to say about its sprawling cast of humans and gods, fate, power, war, love, justice, and more. Focus will be given to the narrative, poetic technique, and the translation itself. We will cover 4 books of the epic per class over the course of 6 weeks and supplement our discussion with the following incisive secondary sources:

     

    “The Iliad, or The Poem of Force” by Simone Weil

    “The Iliad as Ethical Thinking: Politics, Pity, And The Operation Of Esteem” by Dean Hammer

    “The Poetics of Loss in Greek Epic” by Sheila Murnaghan

    “Bitch that I Am”: Self-Blame and Self- Assertion in the Iliad” by Ruby Blondell

    See more details

June 4, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    June 4, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

June 6, 2024
  • DIVINE GIFTS AND THEIR TERRIBLE COST: READING EMILY WILSON’S NEW TRANSLATION OF THE ILIAD

    June 6, 2024  6:00 pm - 8:30 pm

    More details: https://classroom.ruthstonehouse.org/product/divine-gifts-and-their-terrible-cost-reading-emily-wilsons-new-translation-of-the-iliad/

    The famous god whose legs are bent replied,

    ‘Take heart, dispel these worries from your mind.

    I wish that I could hide him far away

    from cruel death when harsh fate comes for him

    as easily as I can make him armor

    so marvelous that any human being

    would be astonished at the sight.’

                                  —The Iliad, Book 18

    Emily Wilson opens the introduction to her thrilling new translation of The Iliad by explaining that it “tells two interwoven stories across its twenty-four books. The first describes the overwhelming anger of a Greek warrior, Achilles, and its catastrophic consequences. The second tell how a brave Trojan warrior, Hector, leave his city and family to attack the Greek invaders—and returns home only after death. […] The beautiful word minunthadios, ‘short-lived,’ is used for both Achilles and Hector, and applies to all of us. We die too soon, and there is no adequate recompense for the terrible, inevitable loss of life. Yet through poetry, the words, actions, and feelings of some long-ago brief lives may be remembered even three thousand years later.”

     

    In this class, we will gain a better understanding of not only these two interwoven stories, but also what the epic poem has to say about its sprawling cast of humans and gods, fate, power, war, love, justice, and more. Focus will be given to the narrative, poetic technique, and the translation itself. We will cover 4 books of the epic per class over the course of 6 weeks and supplement our discussion with the following incisive secondary sources:

     

    “The Iliad, or The Poem of Force” by Simone Weil

    “The Iliad as Ethical Thinking: Politics, Pity, And The Operation Of Esteem” by Dean Hammer

    “The Poetics of Loss in Greek Epic” by Sheila Murnaghan

    “Bitch that I Am”: Self-Blame and Self- Assertion in the Iliad” by Ruby Blondell

    See more details

June 11, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    June 11, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

June 18, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    June 18, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

June 25, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    June 25, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

July 2, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    July 2, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

July 9, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    July 9, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

July 16, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    July 16, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

July 23, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    July 23, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

July 30, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    July 30, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

August 6, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    August 6, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

August 13, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    August 13, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

August 20, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    August 20, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

August 27, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    August 27, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

September 3, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    September 3, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

September 10, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    September 10, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

September 17, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    September 17, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

September 24, 2024
  • Weekly Workshop

    September 24, 2024  6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

    Description: Weekly poetry workshop with various instructors, free and open to the public! Sign up at the link below and we'll add you to our Google Classroom.

    Join here: https://ruthstonehouse.org/workshop

    See more details

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