Acts of Witness
By Jamie Moon | February 16, 2012Last January, revolution tore across the Middle East during what has come to be known as the Arab Spring.
Last January, revolution tore across the Middle East during what has come to be known as the Arab Spring.
Me Too Monologues will host its fourth annual show this weekend.
Durham Arts Council’s recent announcement of this year’s crop of Ella Fountain Pratt Emerging Artists Grants...
Fiasco Theater Company will bring Cymbeline and its commitment to educating aspiring actors at Duke.
The Mystery of Edwin Drood thoroughly surprised me.
Academia can often treat poetry like an obligatory scavenger hunt.
Have you ever had the urge to sit outside in the rain at night and take pictures of your mother’s patio furniture?
Outside of Loaf, a bakery in downtown Durham, passersby stop to observe a brass and steel sculptural rendition of the business’s wheat stalk logo surrounded by metal silhouettes of people in its...
The first time I heard of Edward Albee’s 1962 play Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? was in my 11th grade American Literature class.
In a way, CAM Raleigh (Contemporary Art Museum Raleigh) resembles a split-level house.
Mystery writer and North Carolina native Margaret Maron is the author of 26 novels and two series and the winner of several major American awards for mysteries, including the Edgar and Agatha Awards.
The elegantly dressed man appears from the shadows and examines his massive gift, wrapped in concealing cloth and a wide scarlet ribbon.
What does a group of sixteen landscape artists, portrait painters and black and white photographers have in common?
If you’re in the Bryan Center and stop to look closely, you might be surprised to see art pieces on display credited to Mechanical Engineering, Biology, Economics and English majors, to name a few.
Hoof ‘n’ Horn is known for immersive shows capable of transporting audiences—to the heart of Egypt in Aida, deep into our fairy-tale fears in Into the Woods or back to the Cold War era in Chess.
This Friday, East Campus Quad will provide the backdrop for an outdoor screening of international dance films from New York City’s Dance Films Association and Duke dance students.
A diverse profile of literary figures will speak at White Lecture Hall this Friday.
This weekend, Duke’s student-run Wendell Theater Company will present Keith Huff’s gritty drama A Steady Rain, which follows the lives of two policemen as they become embroiled in a cannibalistic...
The program for Glass, Little Green Pig Theatrical Concern’s newest play, explains that it is an adaptation of Tennessee Williams’ classic mid-century drama The Glass Menagerie, with scenes from...
At Duke, and at colleges and universities nationwide, there seem to be more and more student-led discussions surrounding gender and its relation to power dynamics.