A new board game highlights the colonized experience
Departing from games that glorify European conquest, “Promesa” helps players understand Puerto Rico as a modern-day colony.
Departing from games that glorify European conquest, “Promesa” helps players understand Puerto Rico as a modern-day colony.
Delegation meets campus leaders, with an eye toward AI applications and the Icelandic language.
Natural world philosophies are a source of solutions.
Independent study provides an opportunity to enhance understanding, share learnings with the MIT community.
“In Search of Bengali Harlem,” a new film co-created by Professor Vivek Bald, salutes South Asians who carved out new lives in the US, against the odds.
New measures build on insights from a course on the Indigenous history of the Institute, now in its third semester.
Students in 21H.S04 explore stories of students and faculty from South Asia via oral histories and the Institute Archives/Distinctive Collections.
Wiebke Denecke, an expert in East Asian literature, wants to add to the international, interdisciplinary study of the humanities at MIT.
Internationally respected and beloved, Marx created a new lens for American history studies — and was a leader in bringing the humanities into a central academic role at MIT.
An early interest in archaeology led senior Sophia Mittman to explore many facets of materials science, from restoring artwork to making mining more sustainable.
In his book, “New Industrial Urbanism,” Eran Ben-Joseph looks at the evolving form and function of 21st-century cities.
At a recent seminar, MIT faculty analyzed Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
MIT historian analyzes the uncertain dynamics of a global crisis.
The annual event aims to realize the promise of "new normal" education through community and technology.
Historian Tanalís Padilla’s new book about activist rural schools in Mexico highlights long-running tensions in the nation’s politics.