Lunch and Learn: Prescribing from the Bookshelf: Bibliotherapy and the use of Books as Medicine
Please join us for a virtual presentation by Historian Mary Mahoney on bibliotherapy, or the use of books as medicine.
Please join us for a virtual presentation by Historian Mary Mahoney on bibliotherapy, or the use of books as medicine.
Please join us for a virtual presentation by Historian Mary Mahoney on bibliotherapy, or the use of books as medicine.
Journey through our collection to find objects that tell the stories of Black Connecticans, both ordinary and extraordinary, from the 1600s to today.
Journey through our collection to find objects that tell the stories of Black Connecticans, both ordinary and extraordinary, from the 1600s to today.
Join us the first Wednesday of every month for conversation about a short story. This week’s selection is Eudora Welty's masterpiece of gossip and vulgarity, "Petrified Man."
Join us the first Wednesday of every month for conversation about a short story. This week’s selection is Eudora Welty's masterpiece of gossip and vulgarity, "Petrified Man."
Join us the first Wednesday of every month for conversation about a short story. This week’s selection is Eudora Welty's masterpiece of gossip and vulgarity, "Petrified Man."
Join pastor, author, and advocate Rev. Dr. Sarah Griffith Lund for this online program that explores how religious views of mental illness have changed over time and what it means for us today.
Join pastor, author, and advocate Rev. Dr. Sarah Griffith Lund for this online program that explores how religious views of mental illness have changed over time and what it means for us today.
Join pastor, author, and advocate Rev. Dr. Sarah Griffith Lund for this online program that explores how religious views of mental illness have changed over time and what it means for us today.
This free, virtual talk by Smithsonian Curator Katherine Ott will examine some of the ways disability has collided with assumptions about how to be human, using objects from history as a guide.
Please join us for a virtual discussion by Professor Cornelia Dayton about mental health in colonial New England.