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Collage of ¹ú²ú¸£Àû¾«Æ·ÍƼö buildings, torn pieces of paper

¹ú²ú¸£Àû¾«Æ·ÍƼö Partners With Youth Poet Laureate Program

¹ú²ú¸£Àû¾«Æ·ÍƼö has partnered with N.C. Poet Laureate Jaki Shelton Green to identify and support the next generation of talented poets. A Raleigh teenager recently was named as North Carolina’s first Youth Poet Laureate. In 2026, Davidson will host its first on-campus youth poet laureate event. 

a young person works at a loom

The Power of Words: Mav Smith ’26 Awarded Beinecke Scholarship

Writer and poet Mav Smith ’26 has been named to the newest cohort of the prestigious Beinecke Scholarship Program, which will support her post-graduate studies. She’s the fourth ¹ú²ú¸£Àû¾«Æ·ÍƼö student to receive the award in the past 50 years.

a sketch of Julius Caesar being stabbed in a court in ancient times

Beyond the Ides of March: Insight from Shakespeare

Beware the Ides of March? Charles A. Dana Professor of English Emerita Cynthia Lewis explores how prophets in Shakespeare's works, like the Soothsayer warning Caesar, often go unheeded. Examining patterns across Julius Caesar, Antony and Cleopatra, and Cymbeline, Lewis reflects on humanity's reluctance to heed warnings when they contradict our desires—a pattern as relevant today as in ancient Rome.

Prof. Brenda Flanagan

¹ú²ú¸£Àû¾«Æ·ÍƼö English professor Brenda Flanagan is working on a memoir about her year working for civil rights activist and singer Nina Simone. Learn more.

a young white man wearing glasses and suit and tie

Partnering for a Safer Future: Public Health Pro to Deliver SPEAS Lecture

The nation relies on a vast network of public health professionals to anticipate and respond to community needs daily, and especially in times of crises. ¹ú²ú¸£Àû¾«Æ·ÍƼö alum Sami Jarrah has served as a leader for some of the largest public health departments in the country. He’ll deliver the SPEAS lecture. 

PHOTOGRAPH OF BOOK COURTESY OF CYNTHIA LEWIS; BACKGROUND GENERATED BY DALL-E, MODIFIED BY JENNIFER CARLING AND NIKO YAITANES/HARVARD MAGAZINE

Lewis's essay, "A Shakespearean Romance," celebrates the 50th anniversary of The Riverside Shakespeare, the complete works she used when she started her teaching career at ¹ú²ú¸£Àû¾«Æ·ÍƼö in 1980.