When Japan met the world
Inspired by a family background with extensive U.S-Japan ties, historian Hiromu Nagahara explores Japan’s cultural links to other societies.
Inspired by a family background with extensive U.S-Japan ties, historian Hiromu Nagahara explores Japan’s cultural links to other societies.
Senior Jessy Lin, a double major in EECS and philosophy, is programming for social good.
Worldwide honors for 2019 span three MIT schools.
“My job is to be critical and deep as an art historian, and not as a politician,” says PhD student Nisa Ari.
Pianist David Deveau’s latest album interprets works by Beethoven, Mozart, and MIT’s own John Harbison.
In “Dispatches from Planet 3,” Marcia Bartusiak illuminates overlooked breakthroughs and the people who made them.
Historian, curator, and designer studies architects and their quest to make a better world.
Doctoral student Ryan Hill studies factors that influence researchers’ professional paths, while lending his voice to support student families.
Congress of leading thinkers in economic, business, and social history convenes in the US for first time in 50 years.
Doctoral student Parrish Bergquist investigates how politics affects environmental decision-making.
Media studies scholar Lisa Parks examines the way satellites and other aerial technologies have changed society.
Assistant professor explores how risk sharing and mutual aid shifted to individual forms of protection.
Graduate student Elena Sobrino looks beyond the headlines to study interactions between the city’s people and institutions.
In a “mathy” philosophy class, students explore the risks, outcomes, and ethical implications of living in a warming world.