Tag: Slavery
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Arts & CultureSolving a mystery of 19th-century literary historyScholar’s new biography nails down identity of earliest known Black American woman novelist, first theorized by Gates  
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Arts & CultureIn stutter, artist finds voicePoet and musician embraces onetime “curse” in compositions inspired by nature and Blackness.  
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Campus & CommunitySaying their names, remembering their livesHarvard strengthens research, educational ties with Royall House and Slave Quarters in Medford.  
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NationDealing with legacy of slavery must include voices of descendantsThe Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery Memorialization Committee hosted the first of a series of programs to explore the role descendants of enslaved people play in helping institutions reckon with the history of slavery in the present.  
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HealthHow Lucy, Betsey, and Anarcha became foremothers of gynecologyHutchins exhibit, “A Narrative of Reverence to Our Foremothers in Gynecology,” centers around lives of three enslaved women who underwent unspeakable experiments without anesthesia for J. Marion Sims.  
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Campus & CommunitySolemn stewardshipA report by the Steering Committee on Human Remains in University Museum Collections was released by President Larry Bacow on Thursday.  
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Nation & WorldA model for nation in family celebrations of JuneteenthHistorian and legal scholar Annette Gordon-Reed discusses how Texans celebrate our newest national holiday, Juneteenth.  
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Campus & CommunityOne lie leads to another until we tell the truthHarvard Radcliffe Institute held a daylong conference, “Telling the Truth About All This: Reckoning with Slavery and Its Legacies at Harvard and Beyond,” on Friday.  
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Campus & CommunityDual message of slavery probe: Harvard’s ties inseparable from rise, and now University must actUniversity leadership accepts recommendations of report with $100 million pledge.  
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Campus & CommunityRevealing webs of inequities rooted in slavery, woven over centuriesHarvard vows long-term commitment to improve lives, futures of descendant communities through research, education, service.  
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Campus & CommunitySlavery isn’t dead, Clint Smith says. It isn’t even past.Shining a light on the complex history of slavery and how we understand its lasting impacts is at the heart of Clint Smith’s latest work.  
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Nation & WorldWhy do we need critical race theory? Here is my family’s storyAs part of the Gazette’s Unequal series, Tauheedah Baker-Jones, Ed.L.D. ’21, explains why we need critical race theory in K-12 curriculum.  
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Campus & CommunityHer daughter about to be sold away, an enslaved mother carefully packs her a sackIn Tiya Miles’ “All That She Carried,” the book explores a tattered artifact to piece together a history of a family torn apart.  
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Nation & World‘We are going to soldier on’After a lifetime of struggle against racism and years pushing for the Juneteenth holiday, Opal Lee’s wishes came true this week.  
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Nation & WorldA reason to celebrate ‘On Juneteenth’Professor Annette Gordon-Reed discusses the rising importance of “Juneteenth” as symbol and holiday.  
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Nation & WorldRacial wealth gap may be a key to other inequitiesThe wealth gap between Black and white Americans is examined in this installment of the “Unequal” series.  
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Arts & CultureRecovering the life stories of the Zealy daguerreotype subjectsGregg Hecimovich, a Furman University English professor, is working to recover the stories of the Zealy daguerreotypes, which depict enslaved Africans in 19th-century America.  
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Nation & WorldRacism, far before slaveryAt a Harvard Lecture, Wellesley College Professor Cord J. Whitaker discusses Black history beyond beyond chattel slavery in the Americas.  
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Nation & WorldCease-fire terms during Pontiac’s War: British retreat and one Black boyIn an excerpt from “400 Souls,” Harvard’s Tiya Miles discusses Chief Pontiac seeking a visible status symbol in a boy enslaved by an officer.  
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Nation & WorldAn unflinching look at racism as America’s caste systemKicking off a monthly series designed to harness “the power of storytelling,” was Pulitzer Prize-winner Isabel Wilkerson, author of “Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents.”  
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Campus & CommunityHow textbooks taught white supremacyWe interview historian Donald Yacovone, an associate at The Hutchins Center for African & African American Research, who is writing the book “Teaching White Supremacy: The Textbook Battle Over Race in American History.”  
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Nation & WorldCrowd-sourcing the story of a peopleTiya Miles, a professor of history and Radcliffe Alumnae Professor at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, spoke to the Gazette about the vital role of public history in shaping American cultural understanding.  
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Arts & CultureThis year, a single digitization focus at HoughtonFor the 2020‒21 academic year, Houghton will pause all digital projects to focus solely on building a digital collection related to Black American history, building a collection called “Slavery, Abolition, Emancipation, and Freedom.”  
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Nation & WorldJuneteenth in a time of reckoningJuneteenth commemorates the end of slavery across the nation, when the Union Army took official control of Texas on June 19, 1865, more than two years after the Emancipation Proclamation.  
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Nation & WorldGateway City: Viewed as an intersection of slavery, capitalism, imperialismA new book by historian Walter Johnson sees the history of St. Louis as emblematic of the racial, economic, and legal schisms in America.  
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Nation & WorldTwitter and the birth of the 1619 ProjectNikole Hannah-Jones of The New York Times and Harvard Professor Henry Louis Gates Jr. discuss the newspaper’s landmark 1619 Project, which commemorates the 400th anniversary of slavery and reconsiders the historical record.  
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Campus & CommunityA renewed focus on slaveryOn Thursday, Harvard’s President Larry Bacow announced the creation of Harvard and the Legacy of Slavery, an interdisciplinary initiative that will build on the University’s earlier undertakings. Radcliffe Dean Tomiko Brown-Nagin will lead the new effort.  
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Nation & WorldHow slavery still shadows health care“400 Years of Inequality” focused on how the effects of slavery have persisted, maintaining a basic disparity in health care.  
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Campus & Community‘The work of culture alters our perceptions’The two-day “Vision & Justice” conference at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study brought together a wide range of scholars and artists for performances and discussions considering the role of the arts in understanding the nexus of art, race, and justice.  
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Nation & WorldSlavery alongside ChristianityA student-mounted exhibition probes the ties and tensions between slavery and Christianity during centuries of American bondage.  
 
							 
							