Juneteenth
Juneteenth commemorates the day when the last enslaved African Americans learned they were free 155 years ago. Learn more »
Juneteenth commemorates the day when the last enslaved African Americans learned they were free 155 years ago. Learn more »
“What I know is that this generation and future generations of Amherst students will push leaders to confront the ugliness of racism and demand change.” — Norm Jones, Chief Diversity & Inclusion Officer, on the June 19 holiday celebration of emancipation from slavery in the United States.
“We’re not tearing the flag, we’re unraveling it.” — Art Professor Sonya Clark describing her 2018 performance piece Unraveling, in which she and audience members would pull apart a Confederate flag thread by thread.
Note: The title of the work was very specific choice of hers, she told Vice at the time: “‘Unraveling’ to me is about an investigation about the history of the Confederacy, the history of slavery, and the history of the oppression of people of African descent that is so deeply embedded in the fabric of our nation. The goal isn't to destroy the flag, but to investigate what it means to take it apart.”
“The individual college youth cannot wait forever until the problem of his education is decided.” — Charles Hamilton Houston, class of 1915, the trailblazing civil rights attorney who created and led the legal strategy that would ultimately end racial segregation in American schools. (Houston: back row, 5th from right)
The number of national award winners in the class of 2020: 12, including 11 Fulbrights, and one Saint Andrew’s Scholar. More facts about the class of 2020.
“You need science, you need public health, but you also need a broader perspective. [In the wake of COVID-19] the value of higher education will be enhanced.” Joseph Stiglitz ’64 H’74the Nobel prize-winning economist speaking in the College's online speaker series, “COVID Conversations: Thinking Through the Pandemic.”
“The international student community, singing with the Zumbyes, and going for walks on the bike trail.” Memo Rodriguez ’22 on what he misses most about Amherst. Here's what other students miss most.
“A picture is usually looked at—but what if you listened to it?” Christianna Mariano ’21. What do the neurons of zebrafish larvae sound like? Follow Mariano's transcontinental quest to turn data into audible art.
“Your career should always answer a question.” Marcela Sabino is director of the Laboratory of Activities of Tomorrow at the Museum of Tomorrow (Museu do Amanhã) in Rio de Janeiro.
“It’s very useful if you can tell your own story.” Laura Moser ’99 Moser on running for office.
“We want work that speaks to the students of their generation.” David Little, the director and chief curator of the Mead Art Museum, on the museum’s push to acquire more contemporary art.
“As we spread apart, it’s going to be imperative that we stay connected in ways that we’ve never tried before and think about community in a way that’s different.” Emilie Flamme ’20 collaborated with Professor Mona Oraby on a new, boundary-breaking project for religious studies scholars.
“We make progress and then we face setbacks. But that progress, those struggles, are not going to stop.” Amrita Basu, professor of political science, and chair of sexuality, women's and gender studies, in an Amherst magazine Q&A.
In this video, President Biddy Martin announces the College's plan to move entirely to remote learning following spring break.
“I think striving for a utopia is a really great thing to do with your life.” Eva Gladek ’05 is the founder of Metabolic, which promotes building projects that are waste-free and regenerative by design.
“I swallow. I breathe. All delicious and damned. ” Jesmyn Ward, in Sing, Unburied, Sing. Ward and other acclaimed writers will be on campus this week for LitFest 2020, a free event that is open to the public. (Bonus: Hear 5 students read from 5 LitFest authors.)
NOTE: The College’s literary festival turns 5 this month, and to celebrate, we asked Jennifer Acker ’00, editor-in-chief of The Common and the festival’s lead organizer, to pick her favorite moments from prior years of LitFest.
Games. Ice skating. Music. A donut wall! Follow the Mammoth to Winter Fest. Winter Festival: Sunday, Feb. 16, 2020, 6-8 p.m., Coolidge Cage.
There’s no better time to note that our dining hall is named Valentine Dining Hall. The Feb. 14 dinner menu features heart-shaped ravioli. Dining Services at Amherst College.
Note: Download the “Mammoth Meals” dining app today from your preferred app store.
“Professor McFeely’s riveting lectures brought to life in the most vivid way a world about which most of us had been unaware, a world of black achievement, sacrifice, resistance and attainment.” Henry Louis Gates Jr., acclaimed historian and former student of the late William S. McFeely ’52, the Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer of Frederick Douglass and Ulysses S. Grant, and a co-founder of the nation's first black studies department.
NOTE: McFeely wrote an article for Amherst magazine about the experience of Amherst students, including his own father, in World War I.
Welcome back! Classes are in session and the calendar is full. Upcoming events at Amherst College.
“Democracy must press ahead, out of the past of ignorance and intolerance, and into the present of educational opportunity and moral freedom.” Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., from a February 1964 speech rebroadcast on Amherst’s college radio station, WAMF, later that year. Martin Luther King day is Jan. 20.
NOTE: Rediscovered in Frost Library in 2015, the WAMF recording is the only known audio of the speech.
“I'm looking for energy. I.m not looking for perfection. Perfection is highly overrated.” Jim Rooney ’60, a Grammy-winning music producer specializing in the Americana genre, has worked with John Prine, Iris DeMent and Nanci Griffith. Rooney won a Grammy for production of Griffith’s Other Voices, Other Rooms. This year’s Grammy Award ceremony airs Jan. 26.
“I knew from day one that we would be able to effect good and needed change.” Deborah “D.J.” Williams ’20, on serving on the Massachusetts Governor's Task Force on Hate Crimes.
Note: Baker-Polito Administration Re-Establishes Governor’s Task Force on Hate Crimes.
“My comfort with discomfort is the most important ingredient in my work.” Susannah Grant ’84 is the screenwriter and showrunner of the Netflix series Unbelievable. It was nominated for four Golden Globes, including Best Television Limited Series. The awards ceremony airs Jan. 5. (Photo credit: Netflix)
“I could have been reading him Robert Frost, or a section of the Internal Revenue Code—it didn’t matter.” Peter Zheutlin ’75 on taking a cross-country road trip with his dog, inspired by John Steinbeck’s Travels with Charley.
“At the risk of sounding idealistic, what could be more powerful than bridging campus divides through love?” Catherine Epstein, provost and dean of the faculty, describes the importance of building community through intellectual pursuits.
NOTE: Photo of the Times Square Hotel lobby by Gregory Goode. Creative Commons Licence). The image has been cropped slightly on the sides.
“ It is important for me to tell the story that my mother cannot tell for herself. ” Tracy Jarrett ’11, a producer at Vice Media, writing about her mother Julie Keith Jarrett ’81, who died from AIDS in 1994. Dec. 1 is World AIDS Day.
“The first time I came into the chapel, I had a sense of someone missing. And that someone was Emily Dickinson.” Cullen Murphy ’74, chairman emeritus of Amherst's board of trustees. Johnson Chapel now features two new portraits of the poet, painted by Robert Sweeney, the William R. Mead Professor of Art.
“What would you do if you were replaced by a robot?” That’s the question Patrick Frenett ’19 is traveling the world to ask this year, as Amherst’s latest recipient of a Watson Fellowship.
NOTE: Nearly 100 Amherst alumni have served as Watson Fellows.
“He staggered up and fell to his knees before me, uttering, ‘Freiheit. Freiheit.’—Freedom. Freedom.” Thayer Greene ’50. For Veterans Day, we honor Amherst College military veterans, including Green, an infantryman in World War II who helped liberate a Nazi concentration camp.
NOTE: Photo by Jens Meyer, from “Nazi ‘V-2 rocket’ concentration camp liberation remembered.”
“For decades and into future generations, when the doings of this team are recalled, hearts will dance and race and scream in joy.” Thomas Boswell ’69, Washington Post sports columnist, on the Washington Nationals World Series win.
“We are victims in the present of a false portrayal of the past.” From an editorial in The Amherst Student. In 1969, novelist and scholar Ralph Ellison spoke on campus during one of two campus moratoriums featured recently in Amherst magazine.
“I’m not your usual Amherst story.” Nancy Wu ’93 on becoming a prolific audiobook narrator.
“Our society depends for its well being on the identification and development of talent wherever it exists. It exists in every community and group.” President Biddy Martin.
Amherst welcomes and applauds the decision in the Harvard University admissions lawsuit, which affirms the importance and constitutionality of race-conscious admissions as part of a holistic review of applicants to our colleges and universities.
“We are looking for individuals on the precipice of great discovery or a game-changing idea.” The MacArthur Foundation, describing its “genius” grant. Andrea Dutton ’95 is among the newest winners. Her work focuses on climate change.
NOTE: Art historian and curator Kellie Jones ’81 received a MacArthur fellowship in 2017.
Photo of Dutton: John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
“History has failed us, but no matter. ” Writer-in-Residence Min Jin Lee, from her acclaimed novel Pachinko
“Empathy is a habit that can be cultivated.” Jason Seto ’19 one of six young alumni to be offered a 2019-20 Fulbright grant, one of the most prestigious fellowships in the world.
“Almost all battles can be boiled down to the irritable question: ‘Why can’t you be more like me?’” Author Marietta Pritchard in “Scenics from a Marriage,” which chronicles a lifetime of travel with her husband, English professor William Pritchard
Welcome to Amherst College, Jack and Sarah! These two names appear most often on the 470 new IDs created for the class of 2023.
Link: Orientation concludes on Monday, Sept. 2 with Convocation. See the full schedule.
“It was like we unleashed the magic of Amherst athletics. ” Kristin Ogdon ’00, who, 20 years ago, helped bring home the College’s first-ever NCAA team championship.
“Amherst College was doing ‘community engagement’ long before it actually was a phrase.” Richard Aronson ’69 on the College’s deep ties to the town of Amherst’s A Better Chance House, now celebrating its 50th anniversary.
“Each course is amazing in and of itself, with obvious intellectual benefits. But, for me, it is actually the social part that is most compelling.” Catherine Epstein, provost and dean of the faculty, on course-specific trips that take students around the globe.
“There I was, floating around the Mediterranean—and it sounds kind of corny now, but I decided to devote my life to public service.” Longtime Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau ’41, speaking of his experience after German bombs sank his World War II destroyer. Morgenthau died, at age 99, on July 21.
“The micro, the macro, everything’s so different from what people had imagined.” Malloy’s groundbreaking “Dimensionism” show in the Mead's Art Museum, which includes Capricious Forms by Wassily Kandinsky, closes on July 28.
“What if we could redefine work so that instead of determining the lives we have, it enables the lives we want?” Christine Bader ’93, on picking up and moving to Bali with her family in order to live more sustainably.
“Tutoring at the ABC House helped me break out of the ‘Amherst bubble.’ It also helped me realize the importance of doing things with meaning rather than for yourself.” Brendan Seto ’18 is one of 109 alumni tutors, over 50 years, who have mentored the teen scholars of color at the A Better Chance House in the town of Amherst.
“To be honest, I didn't really know about being an academic until the Mellon Mays. It's made me understand exactly the topography of that world.” Chimaway Lopez ’20 is one of five Amherst juniors in a program that helps today’s students become tomorrow’s professors.
NOTE: Detail from ‘View from Mount Holyoke, Northampton, Massachusetts, after a Thunderstorm — The Oxbow’ (1836) by Thomas Cole. Metropolitan Museum of Art. Source: Wikimedia Commons.
“Two heads are not just better than one. They're actually like three.” Sheila Jaswal, associate professor of chemistry speaking of her weekly consultations with Amy S. Wagaman, associate professor of statistics.
“A lot of those milestones were set by the constructs of the system, not the constructs of my heart.” Cristian Hinojosa ’00 on starting over as a firefighter.