Lydialyle Gibson
Lydialyle Gibson has been an associate editor at Harvard Magazine since 2015. She edits the Montage profiles, about alumni in the arts, and writes about a variety of topics, including arts and medicine—especially where the two intersect, as in her features about Harvard physician-writers Rafael Campo and Stuart Harris. In the January-February 2025 issue, she wrote “Caring for the Caregivers,” about the experiences of people caring for loved ones with dementia—read her Behind the Scenes about that story. She also covers politics and history, with a special emphasis on African American history, and since 2022 has reported on the Harvard and the Legacy of Slavery Initiative. Before coming to Harvard, she was an editor and writer at the University of Chicago Magazine. Her writing has won numerous awards, including several national awards from CASE. She holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Northwestern University and a master’s in creative writing from Johns Hopkins University.
Muslim American Life after October 7
A Radcliffe Institute discussion on repression and free speech
A Potter’s Practice
Harvard ceramics program artist-in-residence Ashton Keen
Five Questions with Ashton Keen
Keen answers questions about her practice, pottery, and inspiration from poems.
“Building Bridges” Across Disagreements
Harvard establishes a fund for student projects that create community.
Harvard Alumnus Wins Chemistry Nobel
David Baker ’84 invents new proteins not found in nature.
Edwin Frank Explores the 20th-Century Novel in 'Stranger Than Fiction'
A book about books—and the protagonist is the twentieth-century novel itself.
Ecological Edges: Darren Sears’s Watercolor Landscapes
The surreal, artistic cartography of Darren Sears
How Technology Shapes Elections, Privacy, and Democracy
Latanya Sweeney confronts our all-consuming “technocracy.”
Two Harvardians Win 2024 MacArthur Fellowships
A legal scholar studying inequality and an evolutionary biologist honored.
Harvard Reiterates Campus Rules
As fall semester begins, the University executive vice president underscores the limits to protest.
Rakesh Khurana to step down at end of academic year
The College dean will retire next June.
Alan Garber’s Harvard Welcome Back Letter
Harvard president welcomes students, foresees conflict in the year ahead.