Posted on Mon., May 15, 2017

Jennifer van Saders, Carnegie-Princeton Fellow, discusses how the technique of astroseismology has revolutionized scientists' view of the internal workings of stars.

Posted on Thu., May 11, 2017

The Tudor statesman Thomas Cromwell was described by an eminent historian as 'not biographable.' Novelist Hilary Mantel describes her ten-year effort to pin her compelling and elusive subject to the page.

Posted on Fri., May 12, 2017

This interdisciplinary conference takes the recent popularity of the historical novel as a starting point to explore the relationship between history and fiction. The plenary speaker, Booker Prize-winning author Hilary Mantel ("Wolf Hall"), will appear in conversation with Mary Robertson, former Huntington chief curator of British historical manuscripts.

Posted on Sun., May 7, 2017

David Mas Masumoto, organic farmer and acclaimed author of Epitaph for a Peach and Harvest Son, is joined by his wife, Marcy Masumoto, for a lively talk about life on their Central California farm. Through stories that offer a personal perspective on growing organic crops, the Masumotos share their reflections on the vision required of artisan farmers in today's food world.

Posted on Mon., May 1, 2017

Johanna Teske, Carnegie Origins Postdoctoral Fellow, will highlight new discoveries about exoplanets including how their composition is "inherited" from their host star.

Posted on Tue., April 18, 2017

"The sun is but a morning star." Walden's famous last line points eastward to the sunrise; but Henry David Thoreau also wrote of the west, the sunset, and day's end. To mark Thoreau's bicentennial year, this conference poses the question: How can we read Thoreau from the sundown side, the far west of his imagination?

Posted on Mon., April 17, 2017

Andrew Wetzel discusses how theoretical astrophysics is now revealing how galaxies are formed, using the world's most powerful supercomputers to simulate this complex process.

Posted on Wed., April 12, 2017

John Demos, Samuel Knight Professor Emeritus of History at Yale University and the Ritchie Distinguished Fellow at The Huntington, presents an account of Potosí, the great South American silver mine and boomtown that galvanized imperial Spain in the 16th and 17th centuries, fueled the rise of capitalism, destroyed native peoples and cultures en masse, and changed history—for good or ill?

Posted on Tue., April 11, 2017

The Huntington has the only known recording of Joseph H. Hazelton's eyewitness account of the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. Aric Allen documents the story of this strange artifact.

Posted on Mon., April 3, 2017

Tony Piro discusses how scientists are combining observations with theoretical modeling to unravel the mysteries of supernovae.