At Home with Harvard: Rewriting History
At Home with Harvard: Rewriting History At Home with Harvard: Rewriting HistoryThis is the eighth installment in Harvard Magazine’s series “At Home with Harvard,” a guide to what to read, watch, listen...
View ArticleAt Home with Harvard: The Real History of Women at Harvard
At Home with Harvard: The Real History of Women at Harvard The Real History of Women at HarvardThis round-up is part of Harvard Magazine’s series “At Home with Harvard,” a guide to what to read, watch,...
View ArticleAt Home with Harvard: Racial Justice
At Home with Harvard: Racial Justice At Home with Harvard: Racial Justice This round-up is part of Harvard Magazine’s series “At Home with Harvard,” a guide to what to read, watch, listen to, and do...
View ArticleCallimachus
VitaCallimachusBrief life (via Platonic dialogue) of a multifaceted poet: c. 310 B.C.E. - c. 240 B.C.E.Stephanie BurtMark PayneJuly-August 2020 features-vita-callimachusTheon, a would-be critic:...
View ArticleOne Small Step for Music
Music theorist Alexander Rehding profiled by Jacob SweetA professor’s interstellar reachJacob SweetJuly-August 2020 features-one-small-step-for-musicIn the summer of 1977, NASA rocketed two spacecraft...
View ArticleWhat’s Become of “Character”?
Open BookExcerpt from Marjorie Garber, “Character: The History of a Cultural Obsession”July-August 2020 montage-open-book-characterKenan professor of English and of visual and environmental studies...
View ArticleHonoring Artemis
Two poems from "After Callimachus: Poems" by Stephanie BurtFragments from CallimachusStephanie Burt callimachus-artemis-fragmentsCallimachusIn an “Imitator’s Note” prefacing her new collection, After...
View ArticleAt Home with Harvard: Pride Month
At Home with Harvard: Pride Month At Home with Harvard: Pride MonthThis round-up is part of Harvard Magazine’s series “At Home with Harvard,” a guide to what to read, watch, listen to, and do while...
View ArticleHow Harvard Handled the 1918 Flu Pandemic
How Harvard Handled the 1918 Flu PandemicMatteo Wong How Harvard Handled the 1918 Flu PandemicOn September 23, 1918, when Harvard College opened its doors for the new school year, the Spanish flu had...
View ArticleAt Home with Harvard: Inequality in America
At Home with Harvard: Inequality in America At Home with Harvard: Inequality in AmericaThis round-up is part of Harvard Magazine’s series “At Home with Harvard,” a guide to what to read, watch, listen...
View ArticleCalhoun-Fall
Calhoun-FallPeter H. Wood Calhoun-FallPeter H. Wood ’64, Ph.D. ’72, an emeritus history professor at Duke University and former member of Harvard’s Board of Overseers, submitted this essay reflecting...
View ArticleAt Home with Harvard: The Immigrant Experience
At Home with Harvard: The Immigrant Experience At Home with Harvard: The Immigrant ExperienceThis round-up is part of Harvard Magazine’s series “At Home with Harvard,” a guide to what to read, watch,...
View ArticleWhy Do We Still Have the Electoral College?
Why Do We Still Have the Electoral College?Marina N. Bolotnikova Why Do We Still Have the Electoral College?The title of Alexander Keyssar’s new book—Why Do We Still Have the Electoral College?—is...
View ArticleAt Home with Harvard: Harvard in the World
At Home with Harvard: Harvard in the World At Home with Harvard: Harvard in the WorldThis round-up is part of Harvard Magazine’s series “At Home with Harvard,” a guide to what to read, watch, listen...
View ArticleBringing Black History to Light
Bringing Black History to LightLydialyle Gibson Houghton Library digitizes African American history materials“These voices that exist in our collections, they’re always just waiting for us to listen to...
View ArticleAt Home with Harvard: American Democracy
At Home with Harvard: American Democracy At Home with Harvard: American DemocracyThis round-up is part of Harvard Magazine’s series “At Home with Harvard,” a guide to what to read, watch, listen to,...
View ArticleCould COVID-19 Transform U.S. Education?
Could COVID-19 Transform U.S. Education?Marina N. Bolotnikova Could COVID-19 Transform U.S. Education?Paul Reville, former Massachusetts secretary of education, now directs the Harvard Graduate School...
View ArticleAt Home with Harvard: Library Treasures
At Home with Harvard: Library Treasures At Home with Harvard: Library TreasuresThis round-up is part of Harvard Magazine’s series “At Home with Harvard,” a guide to what to read, watch, listen to, and...
View ArticleNear and Distant Objectives
Constitutional scholar Noah Feldman profiled by Lincoln CaplanHarvard Law School professor Noah Feldman’s constitutionalism is a branch of the humanities.Lincoln CaplanSeptember-October 2020...
View ArticleAt Home with Harvard: Sounds of Music
At Home with Harvard: Sounds of Music At Home with Harvard: Sounds of MusicThis round-up is part of Harvard Magazine’s series “At Home with Harvard,” a guide to what to read, watch, listen to, and do...
View ArticleMayra Rivera
Harvard Portrait: Mayra RiveraLydialyle GibsonNovember-December 2020 jhj-portrait-mayra-riveraMellon professor of religion and Latinx studies Mayra Rivera was never a fan of apocalyptic narratives—“at...
View ArticleFamily History
Review of Martin Puchner’s “The Language of Thieves”In decoding a captivating language, a scholar is unsettled by an ancestor’s secret.Marina N. BolotnikovaNovember-December 2020...
View ArticleSee Their Faces
See Their FacesMarina N. Bolotnikova See Their FacesThe pictures are spectral, disorienting portals into the slave South. The 15 daguerreotypes of South Carolina slaves, taken by Joseph Zealy at the...
View ArticleAt Home with Harvard: Election Day
At Home with Harvard: Election Day At Home with Harvard: Election DayThis round-up is part of Harvard Magazine’s series “At Home with Harvard,” a guide to what to read, watch, listen to, and do while...
View ArticleCassandra Albinson
Harvard PortraitHarvard Portrait: Cassandra AlbinsonJonathan ShawJanuary-February 2021 jhj-portrait-cassandra-albinsonVisiting a Victorian house museum with her mother (an architect), young Cassandra...
View ArticlePeabody Museum Discovers Possible Slave Remains in Its Collections
Peabody Museum Discovers Possible Slave Remains in Its Collections Marina N. Bolotnikova Peabody Museum Discovers Possible Slave Remains in Its Collections The Peabody Museum of Archaeology and...
View ArticleCulture in the Cold War
Defining FreedomAn intellectual history of the Cold War eraSpencer Lee LenfieldMarch-April 2021 right-now-culture-cold-warIn 1946, shortly after the end of World War II, the philosopher Hannah Arendt...
View ArticleBraxton Shelley
Harvard PortraitMusician and professor Braxton ShelleyJacob SweetMay-June 2021 jhj-portrait-braxton-shelleyWhen Braxton Shelley was five, he approached his church’s organist, fascinated by the man’s...
View ArticleNot Just “Office Helpers”
Open BookSecretaries’ role in history of informationMay-June 2021 montage-open-book-history-informationIn an era of TMI, one may hesitate to welcome the 881-page Information: A Historical Companion...
View ArticleDemocracy Requests the Pleasure of Your Company
ForumHumanities and democratic discourse belong togetherActive citizens are humanists.Doris SommerMay-June 2021 features-democracy-requests-companyThe day before she cast two tiebreaker votes in the...
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