Showing 1241 - 1250 of 1841 results.
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How Historians Are Documenting #MeToo
Harvard’s Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America has opened its #metoo Digital Media Collection to the public. -
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Votes for Women: An Island Perspective
Research at Schlesinger Library helped exhibitions assistant Kate Logue assemble an exhibit on the Blackwell family at the Martha’s Vineyard Museum. -
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A Database of 5,000 Historical Cookbooks Is Now Online, and You Can Help Improve It
It took honorary curator of Schlesinger’s Culinary Collection Barbara Ketcham Wheaton more than 50 years to compile The Sifter. -
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The Long March for Suffrage
A Radcliffe project marks the 19th Amendment centennial, while focusing on the women who would not be fully enfranchised for decades more. -
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Ansel Adams and Polaroid, 1949-1984
Explore the test photographs and memos made by the famed photographer as part of his consultancy with the Polaroid Corporation.
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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.