Literature


Generational Memory: Echoes of the Holocaust

Writing about the Holocaust, I have realized that generational memory is an important access point to the subject matter. The writing techniques I’ve adopted follow the same principle as generational memory: that, while the Holocaust itself is hard to approach, its ripple effects are tangible.


Performance and Storytelling on the London Stage.

The following is the first in a series of diary entries that track the progress of my Artist Development Fellowship, as I work on a series of pieces for theatre using puppets, animations and actors. I hope to share with you some of my experiences and sources of inspiration as I put the pieces together, both on the page and through meeting and collaborating with other artists in London.


Schoolhouse Rock

John T. Hamilton has the studied look of the stereotypical Harvard professor. But for Hamilton, academia was an afterthought—during the first fifteen years of his adult life, he wrote, performed, and recorded rock music.


Ian McEwan Lecture

Tuesday afternoon Ian McEwan, acclaimed British novelist, speaks at the inaugural Rita E. Hauser Forum sponsored by the Mahindra Humanities Center. In his talk, "The Lever: Where Novelists Stand to Move the World," McEwan recounted--and appreciated--several readers' corrections to his work.


Many Dissatisfied with Creative Writing

The challenges of both securing a seat in Harvard’s oversubscribed creative writing classes and winning a coveted approval for a creative thesis can be both academically limiting and creatively frustrating.


Composer, conductor, and poet Matthew A. Aucoin '12 wrote the score and libretto for the upcoming opera "Hart Crane," premiering on the Loeb Mainstage on Friday.


James Wood Named Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature

Harvard English professor James Wood joined a list that includes writers Samuel T. Coleridge, William B. Yeats, and J. K. Rowling when he was designated a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature last week.


Monday evening Chad Harbach '97 discusses his recent novel, The Art of Fielding, at an event sponsored by the Mahindra Humanities Center Undergraduate Committee. Harbach answered questions from student interviewers Madeleine Schwartz '12 and Mark Chiusano '12 about writing, baseball, and his experience at Harvard.


Authors Examine Gender Roles in Children's Literature

Four authors and scholars examined gender roles and stereotypes in children’s and young adult literature at a Women’s Week 2012 event on Monday.


Grossman Discusses Israeli Literature

Israeli novelist and political activist David Grossman shared the stories that influenced his latest award-winning novel, “To the End of Our Land,” at a guest lecture Tuesday night.


April Is the Most Poetical Month

Poetry month is in April So it is time to get playful


Loyalty to authorial intent and the creative desire for interpretation are two of the many irreconcilable imperatives for translators.


Jill Lepore, a staff writer at the New Yorker and a distinguished scholar of American History, reads an excerpt from her new book,"The Whites of Their Eyes: The Tea Party's Revolution and the Battle over American History."


Redwall Series Author Dies

British author Brian Jacques, who died of a heart attack on Feb. 5 at age 71, brought tales of adventure to the imaginations of children throughout the world, including ones who later came to Harvard.


Panel Sees Value in Children's Literature

Children’s literature is more important than ever in an increasingly fast-paced society, according to a panel of five authors and two filmmakers hosted by the Harvard Graduate School of Education.


Michael Klein, author of “then, we were still living”, charms the crowd with expressive readings of several of his poems at the Blacksmith House Poetry Series sponsored by the Cambridge For Adult Education yesterday.


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