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Tribes in Maine Spent Decades Fighting to Rebury Ancestral Remains. Harvard Resisted Them at Nearly Every Turn.
The university’s Peabody Museum exploited loopholes to prevent repatriation to the Wabanaki people while still staying in compliance with NAGPRA.
by
Mary Hudetz
,
Ash Ngu
via
ProPublica
on
December 4, 2023
Before He Was the Unabomber, Ted Kaczynski was a Mind-Control Test Subject
As a Harvard student, Kaczynski was part of an experiment backed by the Central Intelligence Agency that one author argued shaped his worldviews.
by
Bryan Pietsch
via
Retropolis
on
June 11, 2023
Black Students At Harvard Have Always Resisted Racism
Faculty and staff once owned slaves, and professors taught racial eugenics.
by
Harvard University Presidential Committee on the Legacy of Slavery
via
Teen Vogue
on
November 2, 2022
Harvard Leaders and Staff Enslaved 79 People, University Finds
The school said it had benefited from slave-generated wealth and practiced racial discrimination.
by
Nick Anderson
,
Susan Svrluga
via
Washington Post
on
April 26, 2022
The Crimson Klan
The KKK was clearly present at Harvard. But the university rarely mentions the 20th century in its attempts to reckon with its past.
by
Simon J. Levien
via
The Harvard Crimson
on
March 29, 2021
Louis Agassiz, Under a Microscope
The two prevailing historical visions of Louis Agassiz — one gentle and reverential, the other rigid and bigoted — may simply be two sides of the same coin.
by
Saima S. Iqbal
via
The Harvard Crimson
on
March 18, 2021
Getting Into Harvard Was Once All About Social Rank (Not Grades)
In the 17th and 18th centuries, students at America’s elite universities were treated differently based on the social stature of their parents.
by
Erin Blakemore
via
HISTORY
on
March 12, 2019
Before It Conquered the World, Facebook Conquered Harvard
On Facebook's 15th anniversary, Harvard students and faculty reflect on being the first users of Earth's largest social network.
by
Alexis C. Madrigal
via
The Atlantic
on
February 4, 2019
Harvard’s Eugenics Era
When academics embraced scientific racism, immigration restrictions, and the suppression of “the unfit”.
by
Adam S. Cohen
via
Harvard Magazine
on
March 1, 2016
Harvard and the Making of the Unabomber
Purposely brutalizing psychological experiments may have confirmed Theodore Kaczynski’s still-forming belief in the evil of science while he was in college.
by
Alston Chase
via
The Atlantic
on
June 1, 2000
Love in the Time of Hillbilly Elegy: On JD Vance’s Appalachian Grift
Justin B. Wymer knows a snake when he sees one.
by
Justin B. Wymer
via
Literary Hub
on
August 27, 2024
What Are You Going to Do With That?
The future of college in the asset economy.
by
Erik Baker
via
Harper’s
on
July 23, 2024
What Should Econ 101 Courses Teach Students Today?
Why introductory economics courses continued to teach zombie ideas from before economics became an empirical discipline.
by
Walter Frick
via
Aeon
on
June 7, 2024
Friends and Enemies
Marty Peretz and the travails of American liberalism.
by
Jeet Heer
via
The Nation
on
May 14, 2024
The Real Scandal of Campus Protest
It’s not that there has been too much student protest. It’s that there has not been much, much more of it.
by
Erik Baker
via
Boston Review
on
April 25, 2024
First They Came for Harvard
The right’s long and all-too-unanswered war on liberal institutions claims a big one.
by
Rick Perlstein
via
The American Prospect
on
January 10, 2024
partner
Why the Supreme Court Endorsed, Then Limited Affirmative Action
The Supreme Court considers new arguments challenging admissions practices that colleges use to select a diverse student body.
via
Retro Report
on
July 25, 2023
Endowed by Slavery
Harvard made headlines by announcing that it would devote $100 million to remedying “the harms of the university’s ties to slavery.”
by
Andrew Delbanco
via
New York Review of Books
on
June 2, 2022
You’ll Miss Us When We’re Gone
The rise and fall of the WASP.
by
Lewis H. Lapham
,
Michael Knox Beran
via
Lapham’s Quarterly
on
May 3, 2022
Reframing the Story of Harvard’s Humanist Chaplaincy
The time when Harvard made an atheist their head chaplain.
by
Leigh Eric Schmidt
via
Arc: Religion, Politics, Et Cetera
on
November 2, 2021
The Dark Underside of Representations of Slavery
Will the Black body ever have the opportunity to rest in peace?
by
Latria Graham
via
The Atlantic
on
September 16, 2021
Harvard–Riverside, Round Trip
In the contemporary United States, higher education does more to exaggerate than relieve class and cultural divisions.
by
Mitchell L. Stevens
via
Public Books
on
August 11, 2021
It’s Time to Break Up the Ivy League Cartel
Democracy requires something more than a handful of super-rich universities.
by
Matt Stoller
,
Sam Haselby
via
The Chronicle of Higher Education
on
May 28, 2021
Who Owns the Evidence of Slavery’s Violence?
A lawsuit against Harvard University demands the return of an ancestor’s stolen image.
by
Thomas A. Foster
via
Public Seminar
on
September 10, 2020
The Challenge of Preserving the Historical Record of #MeToo
Archivists face a battery of technical and ethical questions with few precedents.
by
Nora Caplan-Bricker
via
The New Yorker
on
March 11, 2019
What We Get Wrong About Affirmative Action
The lawsuit against Harvard forces us to talk about Asian Americans' role in the racial equity debate.
via
Vox
on
December 10, 2018
Is Elizabeth Warren Native American?
What the DNA controversy reveals about race, identity politics, and the Native American present.
by
Claire Bond Potter
via
Public Seminar
on
October 17, 2018
Treasures from the Color Archive
The historic pigments in the Forbes Collection include the esoteric, the expensive, and the toxic.
by
Simon Schama
via
The New Yorker
on
August 27, 2018
original
A World in a Box
Harvard digitizes two centuries of colonial history.
by
Benjamin Breen
on
November 15, 2017
By Retiring a Seal, Harvard Wages War on the Dead — but to What End?
Rather than censuring the legacies of our ancestors, we should work to make our descendants proud.
by
Ted Gup
via
Washington Post
on
March 18, 2016
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