Read an excerpt from Chanel Miller's powerful and courageous victim statement, which she read out in court during her attacker Brock Turner's trial.
Read an excerpt from Chanel Miller's powerful and courageous victim statement, which she read out in court during her attacker Brock Turner's trial.
Begin your study of the Holocaust with a poem by Holocaust survivor Sonia Weitz (Spanish available).
Read this poem by Wislawa Szymborska and reflect on the aftermath of war.
Explore bystander behavior and the challenges of speaking up with Maurice Ogden's poem “The Hangman.”
Read about some of the parts, people, and interactions of the patriarchal social system in Edwardian England, which saw women were treated as second-class citizens.
Author Azar Nafisi discusses the roles of literature and imagination in both repressive states and democracies.
Read poet Shane Koyczan's powerful spoken word poem about bullying, “To This Day."
Indian-American author Jhumpa Lahiri reflects on the difficulties of balancing her dual identities.
Jonathan Rodríguez reflects on his name through poetry. How does his name “place him in the world”? How is it a mask, shield, or container?
Consider the opportunities and challenges that arise when we encounter strangers.
Holocaust survivor Sonia Weitz processes an experience she had in a slave labor camp through a poem and writing.
In this poem, Paul Laurence Dunbar reflects on the experience of African Americans in post-Civil War America and the universal human behavior of hiding an aspect of ourselves.