Harvard Radcliffe Institute
BornCurious
BornCurious is—like its home—about unbounded curiosity. Coming to you from Harvard Radcliffe Institute, one of the world’s leading centers for interdisciplinary exploration, this podcast brings together scholars, students, artists, and doers. Our conversations traverse current affairs, scientific breakthroughs, cutting-edge research, art making, and storytelling. Join us as we talk with and learn from the many people in our Radcliffe community whose work and lives are shaped by curiosity.
Koniecznie odwiedź stronę podcastu i wesprzyj twórcę: www.radcliffe.harvard.edu
Autor
Harvard Radcliffe Institute
Kategoria
Strona podcastu
Ostatni odcinek
25 cze 2026
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Odcinki
From Jim Crow to Higher Ed Trailblazer: The Extraordinary Journey of Ruth J. Simmons 25.06.2026 46:31
On Radcliffe Day 2026, Harvard Radcliffe Institute honored Ruth J. Simmons in recognition of how she has modeled extraordinary and transformative leadership in higher education. In this episode, this most recent Radcliffe Medalist sits down with the Harvard scholar Drew Gilpin Faust—herself a former University president—to recount how a sharecropper’s daughter from East Texas found her way to cour...
An Oncologist’s Origin Story 23.04.2026 33:24
As a young person deeply concerned with social justice, Naomi Ko thought she might become a lawyer—then, reality intervened. After a stint with Teach for America, a volunteer job at the Berkeley Free Clinic would set her on her current path as a breast oncologist. In this episode, Ko shares her unique journey. Released on April 23, 2026. Episode Transcript Guest Naomi Ko is section chief of Breast...
The Importance of Access in Breast Cancer Care 07.04.2026 33:05
Naomi Ko has spent her career as a breast cancer oncologist working in safety-net hospitals—medical institutions with high rates of uninsured patients. What she’s learned is that poorer patients have worse cancer outcomes, and it has made her passionate about health equity. Now she’s writing a book about the patient stories and themes that keep recurring in her cancer-fighting career. Released on...
How America Got into This Mess and How We Recover: Reflections from a Columnist’s Life 26.03.2026 1:12:16
In a conversation with Dean Tomiko Brown-Nagin, the columnist and author David Brooks discusses his career and his perspectives on American politics, society, and higher education. Released on March 26, 2026. Episode Transcript Guests David Brooks is a best-selling author and a political analyst who has appeared in The Atlantic, The New York Times, and PBS News Hour, among other outlets. He serves...
What Makes a Universal Story? 05.03.2026 57:09
In storytelling, can the personal be universal? For the animator and filmmaker Domee Shi, the answer is a resounding yes. In this episode, Shi talks with Ju Yon Kim, a Harvard professor, about how she’s turned her own personal history into successful Pixar movies. Released on March 5, 2026. Episode Transcript Guests Ju Yon Kim is the Patsy Takemoto Mink Professor of English at Harvard University. ...
Our Plant Teachers 05.02.2026 34:17
Many think of plants as passive, but in fact, these organisms display complex behaviors—and we have much to learn from them. In this episode, we continue our conversation with the plant scientist Beronda L. Montgomery, who wrote about the wisdom of the natural world in Lessons from Plants (Harvard University Press, 2021). Released on February 5, 2026. Episode Transcript Guest Beronda L. Montgomery...
The Stories Trees Hold—America’s Black Botanical Legacy 22.01.2026 36:14
The history of African American people in the United States is inextricably linked to the cotton shrub, but seven other species of tree also have deep meaning for this community. In this episode, we learn about these trees from the plant scientist Beronda L. Montgomery, who has just published a book examining America’s Black botanical legacy. Released on January 22, 2026. Episode Transcript Guest...
Battling Burnout and Keeping Women Doctors in Medicine 17.12.2025 37:07
On This Episode Although as many women as men enter medical school, six years after graduating from their residencies, 40 percent of women have either transitioned to part-time or left the profession altogether. Why? The answer is career and life demands that lead to higher burnout rates. In this episode, Ashwini Nadkarni, who coled a seminar on the topic, talks about the ramifications of this—for...
Chimp Change—What Great Ape Adolescence Reveals About Us 20.11.2025 49:38
Rachna Reddy has spent more than a decade observing chimpanzees in the wild, tracking how they grow up, navigate friendship, rivalry, loss, and even the anxieties that come with adolescence—emotions that might feel surprisingly familiar to us. In this episode, she shares how her research sheds light on what it means to come of age—not just for chimps but for humans, too, revealing the roots of our...
Substance Use Disorders Among Women: Reasons for Concern—and Hope 30.10.2025 33:13
Rates of substance use disorder are rising among women and adolescent girls. In this episode, the psychiatrist Shelly F. Greenfield, whose research focuses on gender differences in addiction, explains the situation—and what can be done. Through her work, Greenfield helps us see addiction as what it truly is: a treatable health condition. Released on October 30, 2025. Part of this podcast was recor...
Jodie Foster: Power, Privacy, and Purpose 09.07.2025 48:13
On Radcliffe Day 2025, we honored Jodie Foster in recognition of her barrier-breaking six-decade career in front of and behind the camera. In this episode, the newly minted Radcliffe Medalist chats with the Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr.—a friend and former mentor—and gets deep about her beginnings, her life path, motherhood, and how she’s grown. Released on June 26, 2025. Episode Transcr...
The Importance of Representation in Film 09.07.2025 1:00:28
Women have played essential roles in the American film industry since its inception—as actors, writers, directors, producers, and an array of other positions—but they have long been both underrepresented and underrecognized when compared with men. On Radcliffe Day 2025—as part of a program honoring the 2025 Radcliffe Medalist Jodie Foster—industry insiders took part in a panel discussion to consid...
Storytelling and Grief in Palliative Care 22.05.2025 52:21
There is a long-held belief in the medical field that doctors should maintain a professional distance from their patients. But it’s only human to be affected by one’s everyday experiences—and for professionals who work with serious illness, these experiences can range from distressing to profound. In this episode, a collaboration with Grief Is a Sneaky Bitch, we discover how the Palliative Story E...
Gifts of Intergenerational Friendship 01.05.2025 30:00
When Devi Lockwood, then a Harvard undergraduate, encountered the papers of the poet Cora Brooks in the Schlesinger Library, she couldn’t have known that the discovery would spark an in-person friendship with a woman her grandmother’s age. In this episode, she talks about how that friendship developed—and the lasting gifts it provided—along with archives, activism, and the power of unexpected disc...
Memory in Poetry 17.04.2025 22:37
The poetry of Gabeba Baderoon often reaches into memory and the small moments that show the complexity of love. In this episode, Baderoon talks about what spurred her to try the art form, reads from her previous work, and shares how memory plays into her next collection, on which she’s working this year. Released on April 17, 2025. Episode Transcript Guest Gabeba Baderoon is a poet and an associat...
Music and Chaos 03.04.2025 44:05
A chance encounter with an engineering journal changed the life trajectory of Diana Dabby, who was then working as a concert pianist. Now, Dabby uses electrical engineering to innovate musical works that have variation at their center. In this episode, she talks about her career and approach to various projects. Released on April 3, 2025. Episode Transcript Guest Diana Dabby is a concert pianist,...
America’s Authoritarian Turn 20.03.2025 1:30:27
In his recent—and timely—lecture, Gary Gerstle looks beyond the figure of Donald Trump to inquire into the roots of America’s authoritarian turn. In it, he dissects the events, policies, and resentments that have led to the breakdown of the neoliberal political order, under which the United States has functioned for the past 40 years, and energized the right. Released on March 20, 2025. Episode Tr...
Conversation with Aslı Ü. Bâli 06.03.2025 59:54
As part of a pair of programs featuring open dialogue about issues related to the Middle East, Aslı Ü. Bâli participated in a conversation with Asim Ijaz Khwaja about modern Arab and Muslim identities in the context of university, local, and worldwide communities and events. Released on March 6, 2025. Episode Transcript Guests Aslı Ü. Bâli is the Howard M. Holtzmann Professor of Law at Yale Law Sc...
Conversation with Noah Feldman 06.03.2025 1:03:32
As part of a pair of programs featuring open dialogue about issues related to the Middle East, Radcliffe Dean Tomiko Brown-Nagin sat down with Noah Feldman to discuss his new book, To Be a Jew Today: A New Guide to God, Israel, and the Jewish People (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2024). Released on March 6, 2025. Episode Transcript Guests Tomiko Brown-Nagin is the dean of Harvard Radcliffe Institute, t...
Black Traditions of Mardi Gras 20.02.2025 40:10
Every year around this time, New Orleans clads itself in the green, purple, and gold of carnival, which culminates in Mardi Gras. But the celebration is much more than a bacchanalia—it’s a citywide expression of community. In this episode, we speak to a guest intimately familiar with these traditions, especially how they play out in the city’s Black communities. Released on February 20, 2025. Epis...
How to Be a Better Sexual Citizen 19.12.2024 59:47
What is sex for? This is only one of the questions we must consider to be better sexual citizens. In this episode, we talk to an anthropologist who hopes that thinking through such questions will alleviate the problem of sexual assault in the context of our institutional lives, such as college. And she tells us about her current work, a case study. Released on December 19, 2024. Episode Transcript...
Honoring Mexico's Disappeared 12.12.2024 51:18
More than 100,000 people have gone missing in Mexico since the late 1960s—who are they, and why have they gone missing? We talked to two Radcliffe fellows who have devoted their work to telling this history, from an institutional as well as a personal level, as a way to honor the disappeared and empower their families. This episode contains intense subject matter that may be distressing to some li...
Minipod: Ayodele Casel on Creativity 05.12.2024 8:54
As part of our 25th anniversary celebration, members of our community delivered “lightning talks”—seven minutes on a particular topic delivered by an expert in the field. In this mini episode, Ayodele Casel, whose “unquestionable radiance” has been called out by the New York Times, shares her thoughts on creativity. This episode was recorded on September 27, 2024. Released on December 5, 2024. Epi...
Minipod: Nikolas Bowie on Justice 05.12.2024 10:08
As part of our 25th anniversary celebration, members of our community delivered “lightning talks”—seven minutes on a particular topic delivered by an expert in the field. In this mini episode, Nikolas Bowie, who is currently working on a book contesting the idea that the Supreme Court should have final say on what our Constitution allows, talks about justice. This episode was recorded on September...
Who Gets Autism? 21.11.2024 1:05:06
Diagnosing autism spectrum disorder can be difficult because there is no medical test—like a blood test—to detect the disorder. Doctors draw on an individual’s developmental history and behavior to make a diagnosis. But some populations receive notably more diagnoses than others. It is not clear how many individuals with autism may be overlooked, which means not all who are affected are equally li...
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