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Contributing writer

Elodie A. Saint-Louis

Latest Content

In Total Darkness
Columns

Graft and Ash for a Three Monitor Workstation

Rankine insists that the black body often finds itself in a zone of precarity, one bounded by transgression rendering useless all efforts to move forward and keep going:

Alain Gomis' 'Félicité'
Columns

Wandering Vision: Alain Gomis's 'Félicité' at the Harvard Film Archive

Constructing a film centered on the question of whether or not life itself is possible is no easy feat.

Company Line
Columns

Kevin Jerome Everson: Dignity in the Everyday

I wondered what art would look like if this were the standard—blackness in the background and foreground, blackness in the extras you don’t pay attention to and in the main characters you want to be.

Ashes
Columns

Steve McQueen’s 'Ashes'

Each time I see a black body in a work of art I think of what it carries—death, violence, transgression.

Courtesy of Grand Jury Music
Music

'When You Walk A Long Distance You Are Tired': Moments of Beauty and Profound Urgency

Mothers’ debut album, “When You Walk A Long Distance You Are Tired,” is a welcome assurance that rock music these days has a lot of heart.

Film

'Mojave' Comes up Cold

Despite its emotive cinematography, “Mojave” ultimately falters due to an overwrought screenplay and mostly ineffectual acting.

Poppin' Champagne: A 35th Anniversary Jam
On Campus

Opportunes Pop Champagne to 35 Years

Past and present members of the Harvard Opportunes came together for a jam on Nov. 7 that celebrated 35 years of co-ed acapella.

Music

Hear Me Out: Adele, 'Hello'

“Hello” has all the features of yet another classic Adele track: arresting lyrics despite their narrative simplicity, smooth production, and impressive vocal delivery.

On Campus

'Ayn Rand' Comes to the Oberon

Dizzying, humorous, and sincere, “Song of A Convalescent Ayn Rand Giving Thanks to the Godhead (In the Lydian Mode)” which runs Oct. 15-Oct. 23 at the Oberon, deftly combines Ayn Rand, Beethoven, migraines, and a multitude of other elements.

Theater

‘Crystal’s’ Offers Stripped-Down Take on Identity

In her playwriting debut, director Aislinn E. Brophy ’17 brings stripping to Harvard. Revolving around the struggles of four female strippers, “Crystal’s,” Brophy’s latest production, will run Sept. 25-Oct. 3 in the Loeb Experimental Theater.

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