Celebrating Black History at Emerson and Beyond
Poetry, panel discussions, museums, and more.
Poetry, panel discussions, museums, and more.
Chair of the Communications Studies department Greg Payne contributed to a Globe article examining Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s anti-vaccine history.
As you are aware, a significant Nor’easter is forecasted to impact the Boston area early tomorrow morning
Tufts Medical Center has let us know that the test center at 116 Harrison Avenue will be CLOSED on Saturday, January 29, due to the expected snow.
We will shift back to once-a-week testing faculty and staff starting next Monday, January 31
As most people are aware, downtown businesses have not recovered to pre-pandemic levels, resulting in less active pedestrian traffic utilizing public spaces such as the Common and the Public Garden.
“There are not many Indo-Caribbean people publishing books of poems in the United States, and the fact that this work is being recognized feels like something is shifting, culturally, in the world of American poetry.”
Performing Arts Senior Artist-in-Residence Ted Hewlett shared his perspective on the role intimacy directors play in the entertainment industry, as their presence has grown in recent years.
This year’s hybrid, bicoastal two-day BCE Conference will confront “(dis)enfranchisement: Getting a Seat at the Table,” with a diverse slate of scholars, executives, documentarians, community leaders, and other creatives.
For the first time since March 2020, cinephiles will be able to gather together (masked) in the Bright Family Screening Room every Thursday at 7:00 pm