In Dr Seuss' children's books, a commitment to social justice that remains relevant today (The Conversation)
MALS Chair, Donald E. Pease discusses the new Dr. Seuss book, What Pet Should I Get?
[more]MALS Chair, Donald E. Pease discusses the new Dr. Seuss book, What Pet Should I Get?
[more]Adjunct Professor of Liberal Studies and Visiting Professor of Jewish Studies Alan Lelchuk’s new book, Searching for Wallenberg, explores “one of the great mysteries of our time: What really became of Raoul Wallenberg?"
[more]In “The Plains Indians: Artists of Earth and Sky,” on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art through May 10, “a kind of twilight invites silence,” writes Thomas Powers.
[more]When you write a biography about the creator of The Cat in the Hat and Thidwick the Big-Hearted Moose, be prepared for pushback from the critics: the children for whom Dr. Seuss (Theodor Geisel, Class of 1925) is an icon and a hero.
[more]Dartmouth welcomed more than 100 researchers in American studies to campus for the 17th annual Futures of American Studies Institute.
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