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News, stories, features, videos and podcasts by The Huntington.
A Book Full of Seaweed
Sun., April 1, 2018 | Michele Currie NavakasExamining The Blue Boy
Sun., April 1, 2018 | Usha Lee McFarlingJohn Ogilby’s English Restoration Fantasy
Wed., March 28, 2018 | Daniel K. RichterGeorge Washington, a Letter, and a Runaway Slave
Wed., March 21, 2018 | Olga Tsapina, Ph.D.Making Art/Discovering Science
Wed., March 14, 2018Steven Shapin, the Franklin L. Ford Research Professor of the History of Science at Harvard University, draws attention to the widely held view that artistic productions are “things made up” and scientific knowledge consists of “things found out.” How stable and coherent are such presumptions? Shapin discusses examples drawn from 19th-century biology and from 20th-century and contemporary art.
David Armitage, Francis Lieber, and Civil Wars
Wed., March 14, 2018 | Linda ChiavaroliYone Noguchi and Haiku in the United States
Wed., March 7, 2018 | Natalie RussellConversion & Religions of the World in 18th-Century America
Wed., March 7, 2018Mark Valeri, the Reverend Priscilla Wood Neaves Distinguished Professor of Religion and Politics at Washington University in St. Louis, describes how new ideas of moral virtue and political reasonableness shaped Protestant approaches to religious choice in colonial America.







