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News, stories, features, videos and podcasts by The Huntington.

Videos and Recorded Programs

Founder's Day Lecture - James Joyce, or: How Good Writers Borrow, Great Writers Steal

Thu., Feb. 28, 2019

Karen Lawrence, president of The Huntington and a James Joyce scholar, delivers the annual Founder’s Day Lecture on the subject of Joyce’s novel Ulysses. Lawrence’s lecture examines what makes Joyce one of the greatest writers, and how he created one of the most original novels by stealing from everybody else.

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Historian Carter G. Woodson

Wed., Feb. 27, 2019 | Deborah Miller Marr
Known today as the "Father of Black History," Carter G. Woodson (1875–1950) was one of the first Black historians to begin writing about black culture and experience
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Partnership with Enrique Martínez Celaya

Wed., Feb. 20, 2019 | Linda Chiavaroli
Enrique Martínez Celaya (b. 1964) began his formal training in art at the age of 12 as an apprentice to a painter, but it was not until many years later
Videos and Recorded Programs

A Whimsical Picture with a Grim Message: The Inshoku yōjō kagami and the Imagination of the Body in Early Modern Japan

Tue., Feb. 19, 2019

Shigehisa Kuriyama, professor of cultural history at Harvard University, discusses the Inshoku yōjō kagami (Rules of Dietary Life), a Japanese woodblock print produced around 1850. The image appears to whimsically depict the traditional East Asian view of the body, but it in fact reflects the transformative impact of Western medicine and the rise of the money economy.

Videos and Recorded Programs

Mei Ling in China City

Sun., Feb. 17, 2019

Author Icy Smith and illustrator Gayle Garner Roski discuss their book Mei Ling in China City, based on a true story set in Los Angeles during World War II. The story revolves around the friendship between a Chinese American girl named Mei Ling Lee and her Japanese American friend, Yayeko Akiyama, who was interned with her family in the Manzanar War Relocation Center.

Videos and Recorded Programs

Symposium - From the Mountains to the Garden: The Domestication of Garden Plants in China

Sat., Feb. 16, 2019

This symposium investigates the history of garden plant domestication in China, focusing on such topics as horticultural techniques, the origins and distribution of important species, and the knowledge gained from literary records to DNA analysis.

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Won’t You Be My Valentine?

Wed., Feb. 13, 2019 | Usha Lee McFarling
The modern valentine is inextricably linked to romance—candle-lit dinners, a dozen red roses, and heart-shaped boxes of chocolate. But the long, complex, and fascinating history of valentine cards shows that they have a vastly different origin.
Videos and Recorded Programs

The Entrepreneurial Frontier: The West and American Innovation

Wed., Feb. 13, 2019

William Deverell, professor of history at USC, explores the regional dimensions of American entrepreneurialism; what special features or challenges found in the American West helped drive entrepreneurs and stimulate original thinking, and how and why did the West inhibit breakthroughs or pioneer innovations?