On Campus


Students at the Humanities Center’s “Teenage Wastelands” event on September 29 discussed works such as “The Hunger Games” that are not typically scrutinized with an academic eye.


Mary Stuart (Rebecca E. Feinberg '13) gets chastised in "Mary Stuart," which opens Oct. 8.


Community members participate in the Gamelan Si Betty ensemble, led by Jody Diamond.


The November 18 installment of “Visible Language” will examine the functional and artistic aspects of the Egyptian hieroglyphic writing system.


Harvard undergraduate and graduate students advocate for a $5 billion increase in PEPFAR funds at the Rally to Fight AIDS organized by the Global Health and AIDS Coalition last Friday outside the Kennedy School of Government.


Students Push for AIDS Funding

Seventy-five Harvard students urged the Obama administration to pledge $5 billion to fight AIDS at a conference on diseases taking place in New York today and tomorrow.


Meaning of Trauma

Phillip Kuwert, a senior physician in the department of psychiatry at the Ernst-Moritz-Arndt-University in Germany, spoke as part of a panel discussion yesterday about the sexual violence experienced by German women during the military defeat of Nazi Germany.


Stephen Breyer

Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, author of “Making Democracy Work: A Judge’s View,” spoke last night at the First Parish Church about the relationship between the Court and the American public.


How America Invented the Humanities

President and Director of the National Humanities Center Geoffrey Harpham explains "How America Invented the Humanities" at the Barker Center last night. His lecture was sponsored by the The Humanities Center at Harvard and Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study.


economics forum

Economic Policy Institute President Lawrence Mishel (right) speaks yesterday at a panel discussion on methods to spur innovation, growth, and job creation in the American economy.


Dr. Yakamats presents his answer to the Big Question: "How many bacteria are on the head of a pin?" at the 2010 Ig Nobel Prize ceremony, which took place last evening. Yakamats won the 2005 Ig Nobel Prize in Nutrition for documenting every meal he ate for 35 years. The Ig Nobel Prize honors 10 achievements in research each year, which ""first make people laugh, and then make them think."


Professor Linda Schlossberg, instructor of the popular Chick Lit course, discusses literature for the young adult reader and the difficulties of early adolescence.


Winner-Take-All Politics

Authors Jacob Hacker and Paul Pierson discuss their latest book "Winner-Take-All Politics: How Washington Made the Rich Richer - And Turned Its Back on the Middle Class" in Tsai Auditorium at the Center for Government and International Studies. Former Dean of GSAS Theda Skocpol and HKS Professor Archon Fung were also on the panel to answer questions from the audience.


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