Arts & Culture

All Arts & Culture

  • A tale of two continents

    English professor Elisa New found her great-grandfather’s cane, and that spawned a twisting journey to find her family history, now relayed in a book.

  • Entrance, stage left

    Julie Peters, the inaugural Byron and Anita Wien Professor, focuses on artistic cultural history, as well as the literary works themselves.

  • ‘Shakespeare Exploded’

    A.R.T. leads effort to keep Shakespeare’s plays relevant for modern times, with its primary mission what his likely was: to lure audiences into the theater.

  • All fired up

    The Harvard Ceramics Program turns 40 this year and says goodbye to its longtime director Nancy Selvage.

  • Indian College found?

    Students digging in Harvard Yard may have found remnant evidence of Indian College, one of Harvard’s earliest buildings.

  • Revelations on Revelation

    Biblical scholar Elaine Pagels visits Radcliffe, presenting a “mad dash” of fresh thinking on the New Testament’s Book of Revelation.

  • Learning Lessons: Medicine, Economics, and Public Policy

    With more than 50 years of experience in the economics and policy worlds, Fein dishes the lessons he’s learned on government, decision making, and more, attempting to breathe new life into our nation’s welfare.

  • The Third Chapter: Passion, Risk, and Adventure in the 25 Years After 50

    Sociologist Lawrence-Lightfoot’s inspiring book says that ages 50-75 are prime time for adventure. Forty interviews with people living in their “third chapter” show how fulfilling life can be then.

  • Enchanted Hunters: The Power of Stories in Childhood

    Tatar plumbs the lore and enchantment of children’s stories, revealing their power to ensnare imaginations, and highlights the magic of reading and what children take from it.

  • Women on the move

    A new Schlesinger Library exhibit, “To Know the Whole World,” introduces an interactive Web site on women’s travel writing.

  • In defense of books

    Harvard Library director pens book that in itself is an ode to books.

  • Learning’s online fate

    Panel says higher education is freshened, expanded, and challenged in a networked age.

  • Blowing his own horn

    Musician Fred Ho received the Harvard Arts Medal and performed the premiere of his piece, “Take the Zen Train,” with the Harvard Jazz Bands.

  • Addiction: A Disorder of Choice

    A sobering book, sure to draw ire: This psychologist posits that addiction is voluntary.By analyzing buckets of research, Heyman offers insight on how we make choices, and how we can stop ourselves from going too far.

  • Unlocking the Power of Networks: Keys to High-Performance Government

    Goldsmith and Kettl edit a posse of policy practitioners who argue for network-driven government practices. Presenting case studies from across the nation, these authors reveal how work gets done when forces join together.

  • Purgatory

    This is Zurita’s harrowing chronicle of General Augusto Pinochet’s military dictatorship in Chile, along with the writer’s subsequent arrest and torture. It’s a visually stunning book of unforgettable poems.

  • ‘Stranger Fruit,’ indeed

    Artist Sanford Biggers completes his work “Constellation: Stranger Fruit,” which recalls the horrors of slavery even as it celebrates the stars above.

  • Social security

    Harvard authors who met years ago through social networking produce the book “Connected: The Surprising Power of Our Social Networks and How They Shape Our Lives.”

  • An ode to life

    Musician Fred Ho’s new work, a commission from Harvard’s Office for the Arts and the Harvard Jazz Bands, chronicles the composer’s successful three-year battle with cancer.

  • Rappaport reading

    Nancy Rappaport reads from “In Her Wake,” a book written about the exploration of her mother’s suicide.

  • Arts at center stage

    While Harvard the institution is picking up the pace on supporting the arts, Harvard the students — as ever — are busy making the arts their “irreplaceable instruments of knowledge.”

  • Sing sacred, and hide the flute

    A timeline of the arts at Harvard begins in 1636, when Harvard was founded, the Massachusetts Bay Colony had barely 10,000 settlers, and wolves howled at the edge of the endless forests.

  • “Street Scene” in the Yard

    “Street Scene” is performed in Harvard Yard by a group of A.R.T. students.

  • The Lab experiment

    The Lab, a three-year experiment orchestrated by David Edwards, Gordon McKay Professor of the Practice of Biomedical Engineering, offers a “forum to help catalyze ideas” across many fields. Stemming from his course “Idea Translation” (ES 147), the exhibition of student-based experiments is designed to morph into an ongoing series of events and “idea nights” open to anyone at Harvard with something to show or say.

  • Irony and identity

    Philosopher and classicist Jonathan Lear, this year’s Tanner lecturer, begins his two-lecture look at irony and identity.

  • Treasures unearthed

    Students display results from a semester-long dig in Harvard Yard, including a musket ball, a slate pencil, and a piece of print type with the letter “o.”

  • Ecologies of value

    Radcliffe Fellow and anthropologist Heather Paxson is studying small artisanal cheese operations as “ecologies of production” that are both commercial and moral.

  • Up Close, part 3

    In the fast pace of our daily lives we may overlook the details that, collectively, create a stunning backdrop for all that happens within the University. See the inner workings of Harvard’s pianos up close, while enjoying a melodic feast for the ears.

  • The People Factor: Strengthening America by Investing in Public Service

    Who says the government doesn’t need to work better? After Hurricane Katrina, intelligence failures, and security lapses, Bilmes and Gould argue that hiring a capable federal workforce is central to serving the nation properly.

  • Empire of Texts in Motion: Chinese, Korean, and Taiwanese Transculturations of Japanese Literature

    Thornber whisks us to Asia at the turn of the 20th century, where she documents how Japan’s literature interacted with China, Korea, and Taiwan, thus challenging Japan’s cultural authority.