Humanities
SHASS announces expanded Kelly Essay Prize for undergraduates
March 14, 2013
All forms of nonfiction prose now eligible for the $800 prize
Music professor debuts trio in MIT concert
March 5, 2013
Evan Ziporyn's EVIYAN mixes elements of classical, folk, jazz, minimalist and global traditions.
MISTI Global Seed Funds 2012-13 winners announced
February 5, 2013
Duflo, Lander, Lewin to lead spring-semester MITx courses
January 31, 2013
EdX takes stock of last semester’s MITx courses; data will be used to improve education online and in the classroom.
Hard times in Chicago
January 18, 2013
MIT anthropologist’s new book recounts the painful aftermath when steel plants suddenly closed in the American heartland.
Also labeled: Anthropology, Books and authors, Faculty, Research, Cities, Policy, Manufacturing, Economics, Social sciences, Unemployment, Labor
AIAA honors David Mindell for ‘Digital Apollo’
January 8, 2013
MIT professor’s book earns Gardner-Lasser Aerospace History Literature Award.
The hidden history of Bengali Harlem
January 7, 2013
MIT professor’s new book details the overlooked waves of South Asian immigrants to the United States.
Life in BASIC
January 2, 2013
Nick Montfort and colleagues examine cultural significance of computer code in new book.
Submissions now open for the Isabelle de Courtivron Prize
December 19, 2012
Outsized influence
December 17, 2012
MIT Philosophy has extraordinary success placing PhD graduates in top tenure-track positions.
Also labeled: Education, teaching, academics, Faculty, Graduate, postdoctoral, Philosophy, Research, Social sciences, Students, Epistemology, Metaphysics, Women
Historian Craig Wilder featured in new Ken Burns film
December 13, 2012
The head of the MIT History section served as a consultant on the director's latest documentary, “The Central Park Five.”
Also labeled: Arts, Faculty, Films, History, Law, Social sciences, Visual arts, Social justice, Racism, Journalism, Media
School within a school: MIT Concourse
December 10, 2012
A learning community in which MIT freshmen explore the sciences, humanities and social sciences in a small, close-knit community (with a kitchen!)
3 Questions: David Kaiser on Thomas Kuhn’s paradigm shift
December 6, 2012
Scholars mark 50th anniversary of 'The Structure of Scientific Revolutions.'
Also labeled: History, History of science, Philosophy of science, Technology and society, Thomas Kuhn, Faculty, Research, 3 Questions
Said and Done for November/December 2012
November 29, 2012
Digest of humanities, arts and social sciences
Also labeled: Anthropology, Arts, Awards, honors and fellowships, Books and authors, Comparative Media Studies, Economics, Faculty, Innovation and Entrepreneurship (I&E), Linguistics, Literature, languages and writing, Music, Philosophy, Political science, Politics, Social sciences, Students, Technology and society
Junot Díaz wins MacArthur ‘genius grant’
October 2, 2012
Pulitzer Prize-winning author and writing professor receives unrestricted $500,000 prize.
Also labeled: Alumni/ae, Awards, honors and fellowships, Books and authors, Faculty, Writing, Comparative Media Studies, Arts
The art of being interdisciplinary
September 18, 2012
Babel Working Group hosts 'Cruising in the Ruins' conference
Said and Done for September 2012
September 17, 2012
Digest of MIT humanities, arts, and social sciences.
Q&A: Junot Díaz on his new book
September 11, 2012
The MIT professor and Pulitzer-winning writer talks about the people and ideas in his newest work, This Is How You Lose Her — and explains why women form a big part of his core audience.
Seth Mnookin wins 2012 Science in Society Award
August 28, 2012
National Association of Science Writers honors his book The Panic Virus.
Also labeled: Autism, Awards, honors and fellowships, Biology, Books and authors, Faculty, Health, Journalism, Science writing
Said and Done for June/July 2012
July 16, 2012
Digest of MIT humanities, arts and social sciences
Taking credit
May 10, 2012
When Thailand’s government started offering microfinance loans to villagers, did anyone benefit? An MIT economist investigates.
3 Questions: Hanna Rose Shell on the hidden history of camouflage
May 10, 2012
Historian of technology’s new book traces the surprisingly recent invention of a standard military practice.
Also labeled: 3 Questions, Books and authors, History, Technology and society, War, Camouflage, Video games
Freshman Jimenez-Galindo and junior Trac win de Courtivron Prizes
April 17, 2012
Prize honors cross-cultural fluency
Also labeled: Arts, Awards, honors and fellowships, Books and authors, Diversity, Language, Students, Undergraduate, Global
MIT's Communication Forum conducts a conversation for scholars — and citizens
April 2, 2012
Has explored media and change for more than 30 years
Current SHASS MacVicar Faculty Fellows reflect on teaching at MIT
March 14, 2012
New fellows to be named Friday; current SHASS fellows discuss the significance — and the sheer fun — of teaching the Institute's students
Q&A with Rosalind Williams on history in the age of human empire
February 27, 2012
New book examines the critical juncture when human endeavors began to dominate the planet.

























