Watch, Read, Listen
News, stories, features, videos and podcasts by The Huntington.
The Art of Penjing
Wed., Oct. 28, 2020 | Usha Lee McFarlingNews Release - "Made in L.A. 2020: a version" Off-site Projects by Larry Johnson and Kahlil Joseph Accessible Now
Thu., Oct. 22, 2020The Wisdom of Premodern Medicine
Wed., Oct. 21, 2020 | Joel A. Klein, Ph.D.What Is a Second Edition? A Pictorial Introduction to Bibliographical Terms
Wed., Oct. 21, 2020In this webinar, Huntington Curator of Rare Books Stephen Tabor explains how printing technology developed from the hand-press period to the early 20th century, shows how to spot different typesettings and impressions, and explores how basic bibliographical terms have been used variously by book historians, publishers, and booksellers. Illustrations include examples of varying quality to show how photographic reproductions can produce false clues and digital red herrings. The webinar is useful for collectors (or people thinking of becoming collectors!), dealers, and anybody who works with printed texts or digital copies of originals. This event is part of an ongoing webinar series presented by the Library’s Reader Services Department.
The Past in the Present: America’s Founding and Us
Sat., Oct. 17, 2020Professor Annette Gordon-Reed, Pulitzer Prize-winning author and one of the nation’s premier authorities on the Founding era, discusses how Americans today deal with problematic historical figures such as Thomas Jefferson and George Washington, in the inaugural lecture for the Shapiro Center for American History and Culture at The Huntington.
The Huntington Library at One Hundred and One: Eleven Million Items and Still Counting
Fri., Oct. 16, 2020Huntington curators share stories about some of the Library’s most remarkable and surprising acquisitions. This program is presented by Rare Books LA.
Exploring The Huntington’s Collections Through Bonsai
Wed., Oct. 14, 2020 | Lisa BlackburnWaves of Calamity: Race, Water, and Power in the Evolution of Slavery's Memory
Wed., Oct. 14, 2020Dr. Sowande’ Mustakeem, Associate Professor of History and of African and African-American Studies at Washington University in St. Louis, reconstructs the significance of water and power in how slavery is remembered, exploring the roles of bondpeople, sailors, and slave ship surgeons during the centuries of racial calamity at sea. By centering maritime history and culture in the realities of transoceanic slaving, we gain greater insight into the entangled nature of the human manufacturing system and make greater meaning of the lives of the dead, thereby ensuring the future of collective historical remembrance. This program is the 2020 Kemble Lecture in Maritime History.






