The libraries and archives of @Harvard University. Est. 1638, we are the oldest library system in the country and the world’s largest academic library.
On June 5 at the Greek Consulate, Harvard’s Librarian for Hellenic Studies Rhea Lesage presented the family of Manny Paraschos with print facsimiles of 1893 issues of the long-lost Neos Kosmos, America’s first Greek newspaper. Now preserved and available. https://t.co/nGxfPMDkN9
Happy Lunar New Year. May the year of the dragon bring you happiness, prosperity, and longevity!🐲Check out the @harvardyenching Lunar New Year Exhibit, ongoing till May 15. Dragon in foliage, image from @harvartmuseums, gift of Stuart Cary Welch, Jr.
Merce Cunningham created an informal system for recording his dances, and those notations have found their way into museums and libraries. The six-page “score” for How to Pass, Kick, Fall and Run is on view in the lobby gallery through May 3, 2024: https://t.co/8cH4INxPbc
Call for Applications! “Chinese Communities in Southeast Asia: History, Culture, and Literature” is a Training Program organized by HYI and @FASSNews, to be held in Singapore in December 2024. Application deadline is 4/30/24. For details, see: https://t.co/8YzVKEKpvq
These items will be part of President Gay's inauguration ceremony:
- Charter: Secured from Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1650
- Seals: From 1843 & 1885
- Ceremonial keys: They open no doors at Harvard (or anywhere else)
- College Book 1: The oldest surviving record book
We're excited to announce Andrea Jackson Gavin has been appointed to be the inaugural Program Director of the HBCU Digital Library Trust, a partnership of the HBCU Library Alliance and Harvard Library. https://t.co/7WRlLhA2IC @AndreaArchivist@hbcula
Join us for the next 30 days as we celebrate the 30 presidents of @Harvard! Each day, we'll feature a different Harvard president and the legacy they left on campus and in the archives #30presidentsin30days
We’re celebrating #WomensEqualityDay with this photo of Alice Paul, who wrote the original Equal Rights Amendment. Here she's draping a “ratification banner” after the 19th amendment's passage. Learn more about Paul via @RadInstitute’s Schlesinger Library: https://t.co/N7rD7kqgGC
Vanessa Braganza, doctoral candidate and book sleuth, re-discovered a precious text in Widener. “When I have a daughter, I want history to look very different. I want it to look the way it should look, which is that we bring back the stories that have been neglected and ignored.”
Happy birthday, Julia Child! In this photo she ventured beyond the set of her famous TV show, "The French Chef," to help White House Chef Henry Haller prepare an official White House dinner. Discover more photos via @RadInstitute’s Schlesinger Library: https://t.co/KY4yUSFRny
The Royal Chicano Air Force Touches Down in @HoughtonLib - más acerca del colectivo artístico y activista de los años setentas RCAF, y su vibrante y jubilosa exhibición de pósters de protesta, disponible hasta el 25 de agosto:
https://t.co/a0fFUTuuHI
The Royal Chicano Air Force Touches Down in @HoughtonLib - more on the 1970’s artist and activist collective RCAF, and the vibrant, “joyous protest“ poster exhibition currently on display through August 25th:
https://t.co/a0fFUTuuHI
The impressive collection at @harvardyenching began in the late 19th century with Ko K’un-hua - Harvard’s first Chinese instructor - and now contains over 1.5 million volumes of East Asian literature! Read more: https://t.co/6DyKR1bbgt
Happy Birthday to novelist Emily Brontë! Pictured here is the title page from a 1905 edition of her most famous novel, Wuthering Heights. Look closely and you might notice something unusual: the author’s name is listed as Ellis Bell, Brontë’s male pseudonym.
📸 @HoughtonLib
“What do Malcolm X, Oscar Wilde, and the 6th-century Roman senator Boethius have in common? They all wrote some of their best work from prison.” @BostonGlobe on “Sentences” an exhibition featuring prison writing at @HoughtonLib (now through August 11th!)
https://t.co/5aANv702ME