Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University

In the News

New York Times, February 17, 2011

Radcliffe fellow Susan Landau cites "high-profile cases in which hackers exploited such mechanisms in Greece and Italy to illegally spy on politicians and other prominent people" as a caution against expanded wiretapping.

The Washington Post, February 9, 2011

Fellow Jennifer Wright Knust's Washington Post column on Biblical Sexuality, Part II.

Washington Post, February 8, 2011

Fellow Jennifer Wright Knust's Washington Post column on Biblical Marriage, Part 1.

ScienceDaily, January 7, 2011

For parents wanting to reduce the negative influence of TV on their children, the first step is normally to switch off the television set. But a new study authored by Radcliffe fellow Anne Becker suggests that might not be enough. 

Harvard Gazette, January 7, 2011
[Image courtesy of Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS)]

A Biofilm finding published from Joanna Aizenberg's lab may provide new direction in antimicrobial research.

Harvard Gazette, December 17, 2010
[Photo by Rose Lincoln]

Harvard historian Walter Johnson read from a chapter of his forthcoming book at the Radcliffe, which provides unsettling accounts of those in pre-Civil War Southern bondage.

Harvard Arts Beat, November 26, 2010

Q&A With Radcliffe Institute fellow John Tiffany.

Harvard Gazette, November 19, 2010

Three scholars from Harvard's Music Department received prizes at the Society for Ethnomusicology conference. Kiri Miller, PhD '05, this year's Bunting Fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, was awarded for her recent Journal of the Society for American Music article "Schizophonic Performance: Guitar Hero, Rock Band, and Virtual Virtuosity."

Harvard Gazette, November 12, 2010
[Photo by Rose Lincoln]

Radcliffe Fellow explores Aretha Franklin's role as feminist icon.

 

The Boston Phoenix, November 10, 2010

As books turn into data and tweets are archived for posterity, how will readers and academics cope with the detritus of a digital age? The Radcliffe Institute's "Why Books?" conference—a summit on the future of books and their format, storage, retrieval, circulation, transmission, reception and use—addressed this question.

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