A series of random questions answered by Harvard experts.
Tiya Miles’ new biography looks at development of ‘eco-spiritual’ worldview, how it served her with Underground Railroad, later missions
A photographer’s love letter to ‘Vision and Justice’
Fitzgerald’s masterpiece, now the inspiration for a new A.R.T. musical, never reads the same?
He just needs to pass the bar now. But blue-collar Conor’s life spirals after a tangled affair at old-money seaside enclave in Teddy Wayne’s literary thriller
Claire Messud’s autobiographically inspired new novel traces ordinary lives through WWII, new world orders, Big Oil, and rise and fall of ideals?
Filipino American archivist offers personal perspective to exhibit
Fourteen suggestions for books to take you places you’ve never been, full of new people, unaccustomed sights, smells, tastes.
Writer, animator, architect, musician, and mixed-media artist detail potential value, limit of works produced by AI
Experts weigh in on pop superstar’s cultural and financial impact as her tours and albums continue to break records.
From planning a film festival to researching arts-based sex education, students find “real-world” applications for their chosen passions.
Scholarly wisdom for readers beating their heads against a great work of literature: Stop doing that
Music and comedy meet queer and Jewish radicalism in Morgan Bassichis exhibit at the Carpenter Center.
In “The Streets of Newtowne: A Story of Cambridge, MA.” professor tells the story of city from Indigenous origins to present in children’s book illustrated by alum.
Tiya Miles’ research on Cherokee slaveholding sparked her first novel. A recent tribal reckoning led her to revisit it.
Emmett G. Price III examines genre’s history, staying power ? and “intentionality” of recognition in recent years from elite cultural institutions.
Sammi Cannold discusses her vision for the iconic musical as she introduces “Evita” to a new generation of artists and audiences at the American Repertory Theater.
YouTube star, student, and a ghost called Swan collide in junior’s award-winning play exploring queerness, self-discovery.
Exhibit goes beyond idyllic landscapes to cramped apartment, 19th-century wardrobe malfunction, cancer-defying self-portraits.
Poetry critic reflects on “thrilling” career, writers who inspire, declining support for humanities.
A Wadsworth Atheneum show, curated by Sarah Elizabeth Lewis and Skip Gates, explores Douglass’ embrace of the emerging art of photography.
Emerita professor recalls childhood as Holocaust refugee in memoir “Daughter of History.”
“Mortality got my attention. And it was ? as we are told to believe but rarely do ? a gift,” says the acclaimed poet, whose latest collection, “To 2040,” looks at the many crises shadowing what she calls “the human project.”
Arts First took over stages, museums, and other venues across Harvard’s campus during the four-day festival.
Photographer Zhang Xiao documented the Shehuo festival over a decade of modernization, creating a portrait of how traditional practices sustain themselves amid rapid change. The new bilingual photographic exhibition “Shehuo: Community Fire” is at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology & Ethnology.
“Marine Debris Fashion Show,” a student design competition featuring outfits made from items humans dumped in oceans, was a highlight of the Arts First Festival.
Eight student poets pick a corner of the city with historical, personal meaning and read an original work.
New play to debut at Arts First Festival examines relationship between technology, humanity, and theater.
Sculpture, technology merge in Ceramics Program as tool offers students another way to work with clay.
Rebecca Solnit offers new view of remaking the world, turning climate crisis stories into narrative of the future, changed but still beautiful.
Students talk lyrics, character conflict, listening to the muse with Pulitzer, Tony-winning playwright Michael R. Jackson at CompFest.
Inspired by the success of an all-Asian production of “Legally Blonde,” students wrote three new works exploring themes of identity and representation.
For Cora Frazier, it usually starts with deep sadness
Combining Earth science, Native knowledge in climate change battle, Margaret Redsteer will draw on her research on tribal lands to discuss barriers and solutions to adaptation, resilience.
Somali-British novelist Nadifa Mohamed is a guest spearker at the Writers Speak series at the Mahindra Humanities Center and the History Seminar.
During Harvard visit, Public Enemy rapper visits poetry class and donates one of his iconic clocks.
The new installation is the first-ever presentation of art on the museums’ outdoor Broadway terrace.