Womxn’s History Month Series: Melanie Cordova on Her Path to Publishing Career
With March being Womxn’s History Month, Emerson’s Career Development Center is presenting its third annual Womxn of Emerson Series.
With March being Womxn’s History Month, Emerson’s Career Development Center is presenting its third annual Womxn of Emerson Series.
Emersonians are known for their creativity, nonconformity and out-of-the-box thinking. Emerson isn’t vanilla — and the same can be said about our faculty’s and staff’s dissertation topics.
Twelve Emerson faculty members and alumni, and six ArtsEmerson productions were nominated for dozens of Independent Reviewers of New England (IRNE) awards, which the casts and crews of small, mid-size, and large stage productions in the region.
Emerson College Distinguished Artist-in-Residence P. Carl received the 2019 Distinguished Alumni Award from the Kroc Institute at the University of Notre Dame for a career spent using storytelling and the arts to foster dialogue, create policy, and transform systems.
Photo by Nancy Crampton Poet Evie Shockley’s Q&A for the Bibliophiles section of the Boston Globe ran in advance of her readings in conjunction with Emerson’s Writing, Literature, and Publishing … Continue Reading Poet Evie Shockley Q&A with Globe in Advance of WLP Readings
Emerson College alums had their hands in Oscar Award nominated movies, including award-winning ‘Spider-Verse’ and ‘Mary Poppins Returns.’
Emerson alum Ross Girard, middle, was surprised by Taylor Swift at his engagement party thanks to his fiancee Alex Goldschmidt. Getting engaged is a momentous occasion. Now how about having … Continue Reading Taylor Swift Surprises, Serenades Emerson Alum at His Engagement Party
Please take a few minutes to nominate faculty for our three teaching awards that celebrate dedication, creativity, innovation, and inclusion in the classroom.
One of the Grown-ish’s writers this season was Hailey Chavez ’15, and Visual and Media Arts Associate Professor Miranda Banks (who had Chavez in two classes) consulted on the show, working with the writers to make the characters’ college experience believable to audiences.
Emersonians and the general public got a glimpse of the gritty, ruthless, and tense lives of American and Canadian fishermen feuding over the lobster-rich 277 square miles of sea known as the “Gray Zone,” an area claimed by both the United States and Canada.