Showing 1471 - 1480 of 1850 results.
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What Does ‘Open Access’ Mean to You? Free Research Outputs, and Beyond
In celebration of Open Access Week, Colleen Cressman writes about moving beyond research outputs as an open access goal. -
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Ashes to Ashes, Dust to Death Masks
Harvard’s collections include the death masks of William James, Dante Alighiere, James Joyce, e.e. cummings, Napoleon Bonaparte, and Walt Whitman. -
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A Crypto Challenge for Lawyers: How to Cite Blockchains and NFTs?
A Harvard Law School librarian weighs in on this new-tech conundrum. -
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Harvard Film Archive Spotlights the Resilient Vulnerability of Brooke Adams
The forthcoming film series, “Brooke Adams: Radiance in Plain Sight,” reveals the actor’s relatability in five roles between 1978 and 1992. -
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How Do You Tell the Story of Roe v. Wade?
A new exhibition at Harvard’s Schlesinger Library looks at how the 1973 Supreme Court decision reshaped American culture and politics. -
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Schlesinger Library Opens Exhibit on the History of Abortion in America
The new exhibit presents the history of abortion in the US, from the decades prior to Roe v. Wade to this year’s reversal of the 1973 decision. -
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Pinpointing the Voice of a Nation
In advance of the 2022 midterm elections, BuzzFeed News took a pointed look at the history of campaign pins, from the weird to the terrifying. -
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Education
Racial disparities in education are the cumulative effect of generations of racism, divestment, and denied opportunities. -
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Rushing to Save Her Homeland — Or at Least, Its Story
Ukrainian bibliographer Olha Aleksic is building a real-time archive documenting the Russia-Ukraine war on the ground level. -
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‘Revolutionary, Proud, and Ultra-Campy’: ‘My Comrade’ Founder Gives Hofer Lecture
Communications Intern Tess Kelley covered this fall's Hofer Lecture, featuring drag queen and queer 'zine' publisher Linda Simpson.