Showing 1241 - 1250 of 1853 results.
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How Textbooks Taught White Supremacy
Old history textbooks at the Graduate School of Education’s Gutman Library led historian Donald Yacovone to his next book. -
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10 Vintage Photos of Julia Child in the Kitchen That Will Inspire You to Cook
From Schlesinger Library’s collections, a series of photos of French Chef Julia Child taken by her husband, Paul. -
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Medicine and Activism in George Eliot’s “Quarry for Middlemarch”
The author’s private notebooks, held at Houghton, reveal her cutting-edge research and sharp political commentary on England’s cholera epidemic. -
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Curating the Experience of Black America in the Age of Pandemic
Tracie Jones and Harvard librarian Sarah DeMott joined forces to create an open-source guide documenting the effects of COVID-19 on African Americans. -
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Undergrad Illustrates a New Way to Look at Dante’s Cosmos
Her SHARP fellowship at Houghton Library helped Madeleine Klebanoff-O’Brien ’22 develop a new visual methodology for research. -
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Paul Robeson's Othello
Records from the first major U.S. production with a multi-racial cast -
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What It’s Like to Be a Harvard Freshman During Coronavirus
Convening on the Widener Library steps has become a staple of socially distanced campus life, says freshman Janet Hernandez. -
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Flyby: How to Recreate Lamont
Of all the things we’ll miss the most this semester, Lamont definitely makes the top of the list. -
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Harvard Library Resumes BorrowDirect, Expands Scan and Deliver Services
Library users can now request materials for Lamont pickup or scan-and-deliver from Loeb Design, Tozzer, Ernst Mayr, Divinity, and Law libraries. -
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James E. Hinton’s Unseen Films Reframe the Black Power Movement
In two documentaries recently digitized by the Harvard Film Archive, Hinton shows late-’60s Black activism to be a joyful, community-building project.