Watch, Read, Listen
News, stories, features, videos and podcasts by The Huntington.
Videos and Recorded Programs
A Family Story from Native California: The Wright Family, Kinship and Mobility In California, 1849-1941
Sat., Nov. 11, 2023William Bauer, professor of history at the University of Nevada Las Vegas, examines one family's story as part of the experience of Native peoples between the “abyss” of the 19th century and their return and revival in the 20th.
Videos and Recorded Programs
Aristotle in Pieces: A Medieval Manuscript’s Journey from Italy to Pasadena
Sat., Nov. 11, 2023Book historian Lisa Fagin Davis traces the journey of three pieces of a medieval manuscript written by Aristotle from 13th-century Italy to 20th-century America and The Huntington.
Videos and Recorded Programs
Betye Saar: Drifting Toward Twilight
Sat., Nov. 11, 2023This short documentary film explores artist Betye Saar’s process creating “Drifting Toward Twilight,” a site-specific installation at The Huntington, and her recollections of her life and career.
Videos and Recorded Programs
The Poisoning: A War Crime in Early Virginia and the Origins of English America
Wed., Nov. 8, 2023In this lecture video, Peter Mancall, distinguished professor of history at USC, discusses the increasing scale of violence between Native Americans and newcomers in eastern North America during the formative era of colonization in North America.
Verso
William Camargo’s Protest Pictures Give Voice to History
Tue., Nov. 7, 2023 | Deborah Miller MarrPhotographer William Camargo has a talent for transporting the viewer to a precise moment in time, often delivering a jarring history lesson in the process. His series Origins and Displacements amplifies issues of gentrification and the invisible labor in his hometown of Anaheim, California.
Verso
Reflecting on Daguerreotypes
Tue., Oct. 31, 2023 | Linde B. Lehtinen, Ph.D.There are more than 70 daguerreotypes in The Huntington’s collection, each with stories as unique as the daguerreotype process itself. These miniature portals into 19th-century life preserve vital histories and allow viewers to engage in their own contact with the past.
Verso
Rethinking Maritime History from Below
Tue., Oct. 24, 2023 | James Davey, Kevin DawsonThe academic conference “Maritime History from Below: Rethinking Societies and the Sea” (Nov. 3–4) offers new stories of humankind’s relationship to the sea, including the experiences of sailors, transported prisoners, enslaved people, and Indigenous Americans.
Videos and Recorded Programs
Troubles Below the Waterline: Native Land, Contaminated Water, and Solutions to Global Hunger from Mexico’s Yaqui Valley
Wed., Oct. 18, 2023In this lecture video, Gabriela Soto Laveaga, professor of history at Harvard University and Dibner Distinguished Fellow, examines Mexico's pivotal role in addressing global hunger in the mid-20th century, revealing the significant but often overlooked consequences that continue to haunt us today.







