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In the epilogue to The Unseen Truth: When Race Changed Sight in America,Sarah Lewis describes the foundations of racial hierarchy as "a photograph with no true negative." It is an image without an ...
Sarah Lewis at Aperture Magazine’s opening presentation of “Vision & Justice,” a special issue addressing the role of photography in the African-American experience, which she guest edited.
Lewis’s “Vision & Justice” has grown from a Harvard classroom to a convening this week of some of the world’s most celebrated black creatives.
Sarah Elizabeth Lewis, a Harvard associate professor who is the founder of the Vision & Justice project, believes that images can be powerful in “pushing back against entrenched injustice.” ...
Sarah Lewis, Harvard professor and creator of the Vision & Justice project, poses for a portrait on Harvard’s campus. Lewis recently published a new book, "The Unseen Truth: When Race Changed ...
Sarah Lewis brought together bold names like Carrie Mae Weems, David Adjaye, Chelsea Clinton, and more for a two-day Vision & Justice Convening at Harvard.
Harvard professor Sarah Lewis talks to Co.Design about the transformative power images have for social justice.
Sarah E. Lewis ’01, a Harvard scholar of race, art and contemporary culture, took over the Instagram account of the New Yorker Photo Department in late January to teach viewers about the ...
On the C-SPAN Networks: Sarah Lewis is an Associate Professor for African and African American Studies in the Harvard University with one video in the C-SPAN Video Library; the first appearance ...
Sitting on the desk of assistant professor Sarah E. Lewis '01 in the History of Art and Architecture department is a black-and-white family photo of her grandfather, Shadrack Emmanuel Lee, as a ...