How Black women write the future
Susana M. Morris is the author of “Close Kin and Distant Relatives” and will speak at Mount Holyoke on February 10 on “Black Feminism is the Future.”
Keep up with all the ways in which the Mount Holyoke community is pushing the limits of human knowledge, building lasting bonds and leading the way forward — on campus and around the world.
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Susana M. Morris is the author of “Close Kin and Distant Relatives” and will speak at Mount Holyoke on February 10 on “Black Feminism is the Future.”
Mount Holyoke’s Cora Fernandez Anderson spoke with Argentina’s Elizabeth Gómez Alcorta, who leads Argentina’s Ministry of Women, Gender and Diversity.
Mount Holyoke College’s hybrid Master of Arts in teaching degree programs were highlighted by U.S. News & World Report.
Mount Holyoke College alum Sadaffe Abid ’95, co-founder of the women’s leadership organization CIRCLE, had her trailblazing instincts nurtured on campus.
Mount Holyoke’s Elizabeth Markovits and Renae Brodie tackle the pros and cons of the modular system.
Emma Taylor ’20 was awarded for significant contributions as a community assistant for the French Language Floor and as French mentor and the International Student Organizing Committee for outstanding efforts to promote understanding of the great diversity of international cultures, perspectives, and identities, and for supporting students in a moment of crisis.
Mount Holyoke College’s André White discusses the complex sensory systems that bring the world into our brains with National Public Radio’s Short Wave.
Mount Holyoke College’s Thomas Burbine has won an award from the American Astronomical Society for his asteroid textbook, which was borne of his teaching.
Mount Holyoke students are finding deeper spirituality during the pandemic — despite and because of online services and events.
President Stephens shares a message for the new semester.