Browse Items (405 total)
Sort by:
How I Came to Oppose the Death Penalty
by Steve Earle, singer-songwriter
Broccoli, Anthropology, and the Humanities
by Caitlin Patton, North Carolina Humanities Council
Fathers and Sons
by Scott Gartlan, Executive Director, Charlotte Teachers Institute
Eyes on the Prize
by Kamille Bostick, Vice President, Education Programs, Levine Museum of the New South
Spreading the Love of Libraries
by Deborah Jung, Charlotte-Mecklenburg School District
Unlocking the Code
by Kathryn Bentley, Arts & Science Council
What Happens When We Share Our Stories?
by Theresa Pierce, Rowan County Early College
Without Words
by Christina Lohry, Chantilly Montessori School, Charlotte, NC
Feeling the American Revolution
by Steve Oreskovic, Charlotte-Mecklenburg School District
What Does It Mean to Be Southern?
by Julie Mullis, Wilkes Community College
Studying the Jacobins and Rethinking my Political Leanings
by Tim Miller, Salisbury University
Placing Our Family in the Story of America
by John Cho, actor
From Los Angeles to Guadalajara
by Craig Watson, former director of the California Arts Council
Making the World Bearable
by Malcolm Margolin, author, publisher, and founder of Heyday Books
Writing is My Activism
by Luis Rodriguez, Poet Laureate of Los Angeles in 2014
Deciding Not to Be a Doctor
by Larry Kramer, president of the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation
The Only Person of Color in the Room
by Betty Reid Soskin, U.S. National Park Service Ranger
“You Have to Be There”
by Averill Corkin, Graduate Student, Harvard University
An Unexpected Insight
by Jaroslav Folda, N. Ferebee Taylor Professor emeritus, UNC
Harmonia est discordia concors: A Paean to Choral Singing
by Blake Wilson, Dickinson College
A Lifelong Passion and Appreciation for History
by Ben Vinson III, Provost and Executive Vice President of Case Western Reserve University
Growing Up with the Humanities
by Mirah Horowitz, Russell Reynolds Associates
A Quiet Desperation
by Anonymous
Meeting the last man on planet earth who could speak Latin
by Michael Fontaine, 40, professor of classics at Cornell University
Witnessing the Effects of Near-History in Iraq
by Scott, 34, former journalist
A Scientist Appreciates the Humanities
by Andromeda Crowell, 27, Science Teacher, Orange High School, Hillsborough, NC
Resilience, Humility, and Picnics
by Matthew Booker, associate professor of American environmental history, North Carolina State University
Origin Stories: Or, Making Sense of Surprises in the Family Tree
by Molly A. Warsh, Assistant Professor of World History, University of Pittsburgh
“For the Sake of a Cloud”
by Skye Shirley, age 28, Latin Teacher in Boston, MA