Showing 1391 - 1400 of 1841 results.
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A 21st-Century Emily Dickinson Finds a Home in the Archives
The Apple TV+ series “Dickinson” is donating production materials — including painstaking replicas of the poet’s manuscripts — to Houghton Library. -
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Using Harvard Library During Winter Intersession
All virtual services are available and some libraries are open for in-person use, while others remain closed through January 23, 2022. -
Digital Collection
Slavery, Abolition, Emancipation and Freedom
Rare and unique materials from Houghton library by and about Black people in the Americas, from the 18th through the beginning of the 20th century. -
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Browzine
Browse and read scholarly journals on your computer, phone, or tablet. -
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What If?: New Insight into the Friendship of Virginia Woolf and T.S. Eliot
A newly opened archive of Eliot’s letters sheds light on his friendship with Woolf. -
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True Crime: Helen Jewett and the Origin of American Murder Media
True-crime narratives were once reported in penny papers and crime pamphlets, more than 420 of which are housed at Harvard Law School Library. -
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Harvard Library’s User Research Center Improves Accessibility Using Student Feedback
Including students with disabilities in their research has been key to the URC’s success in increasing ease of access to Harvard’s materials. -
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A 17th-Century Monogrammed Binding Reveals Its Secrets
A book-fair find led to Houghton Library’s purchase of a one-of-a-kind volume, and then to an exhibit on women authors. -
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Letters from the March Sisters
For her new edition of “Little Women” featuring physical copies of the characters’ letters, Barbara Heller researched the Alcott family at Houghton. -
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Humanizing the People Behind an Epic Case
While interviewing Roe v. Wade plaintiff Norma McCorvey for his book, author Joshua Prager came across her papers, which now reside at Schlesinger.