The Making of Marie Antoinette Pageantry meets musings on fame and self-determination in the theater department’s modern take on France’s most notorious queen
When Occupational Therapy Becomes Occupational Justice OT alumna Lindsey Hoffman seeks to combat ‘occupational injustice’ with efforts that consider her patients’ wider life circumstances
Native Art that Embraces the Natural World Elizabeth James-Perry uses materials she has foraged and grown to create fine art inspired by the environment
A Biologist’s Quest to Unlock the Mysteries of DNA Damage Fruit flies, which have much of the same genetic material as humans, help Professor of Biology Mitch McVey and colleagues find answers
Thermal Imaging Is a Promising Tool to Measure Stress in Wild Animals Experiment with birds connects changes in body surface temperature with heart rate to offer a new, non-invasive technique
It’s All in the Family for the Tufts Football Team Five sets of brothers, including triplets, are on the gridiron on Saturdays for the Jumbos
Contemporary Indigenous Art of Brazil Comes to Tufts Combining ancient craft with modern viewpoints, a first-of-its-kind exhibition challenges perceptions of Indigenous art
Retreating Shorelines: What California Can Teach Us As climate change brings rising seas, more extreme storms, and increased flooding, coastal communities need to act—or risk disappearing, a new book says
Exploring the Link Between Racism and Ill Health Tufts psychology researchers get $2.7 million to map the pathways between experiencing racism-induced stress and developing disease
They Left It Out of the Bible The Shepherd of Hermas was one of the most popular texts among Christians in the early centuries of the religion, but it didn’t make the canon