To define graduate students’ time during Covid-19 solely through the lens of academics would be to overlook the numerous details that humanize and differentiate each of their experiences.
The following individuals are not merely Harvard students they are also bakers and entrepreneurs, fathers and daughters, volunteers and Olympic-hopeful rowers. Eight students across five graduate schools sat down virtually with The Crimson to share their stories from an unprecedented year.
Daniel A. Arias, School of Public Health and GSAS
Daniel A. Arias studies the intersection of mental health and epidemiology, as well as health economics. By Courtesy Photo
Daniel A. Arias wishes his scholarship weren’t so relevant to the current moment.
Shaping the Crescent: A Panel on Urban Mutations in New Orleans
offbeat.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from offbeat.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
How new design patterns can enable cities and their residents to change with climate change
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Anti-Racist Pedagogy in Art: A UNT Speaker Series Provides a Vision for the Future
Just imagine what an equitable art world would look like.
By Kathy Wise
Published in
Arts & Entertainment
February 4, 2021
11:37 am
A new virtual speaker series from the UNT College of Visual Arts and Design seeks to imagine a future where the art world is equitable. In such a world, the students and the teachers, the art collectors and museum directors, and the artists and the art would all better reflect the larger world.
The title of the event, 2044 Series: Anti-Racist Praxis as Futurist Art and Design Pedagogy, is a bit of a mouthful. But it’s a thoughtful nod to Bennett Caper’s law review article, “Afrofuturism, Critical Race Theory, and Policing in the Year 2044.” The year 2044 is significant, Caper notes, because that’s the year the United States is projected to become a “majority-minority” country. For the state of Texas and the city of Dallas, both of which already hav