Showing 1401 - 1410 of 1842 results.
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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. -
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Finding Modern Issues in Study of Ancient World
Harvard’s library resources were a boon to Prof. Irene Peirano Garrison and her students in her newly developed Latin composition course. -
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The Baroness Who Photographed 1950s Iran
A collection of color photos, held now in the Fine Arts Library, taken by a European woman who traveled throughout Iran documents a changing country. -
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A Mother’s Grief, a University’s Library
A discussion featuring Houghton’s Leslie Morris on how Eleanor Elkins Widener’s loss of her son on the Titanic inspired Widener Library’s creation. -
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Harvard Film Archive Highlights an Unsung Taiwanese Filmmaker
Mou Tun-Fei was known as a 1980s sexploitation filmmaker, but the early films presented in this series display a gentler, more humanistic side. -
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Harvard Library Celebrates Ninth Annual Fair Use Week
In celebration of Fair Use Week, library copyright advisor and lawyer Kyle Courtney writes about the history of fair use and its importance today. -
Digital Collection
Charlotte Perkins Gilman Collection
An artist, philosopher, novelist, suffragist, and journalist, Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1860-1935) worked against women's inequality inside and outside the home. She wrote about the social changes she deemed necessary to achieve gender equality. -
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How Black Archives Are Highlighting Overlooked Parts of History and Culture
Though mediums vary, the missions, including at Harvard, are the same: To tell a more complete story about Black existence. -
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Arnold Arboretum Turns 150
A look back at the Arboretum’s history — and the millennia to come. -
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MTV, Welcome to My Crib: Lamont Library
You can kick back, watch some TV, chill with your friends — it’s fantastic.