Fall 2020

Editor’s Note: The publication before you is unlike anything we at Williams Magazine have attempted before.

It’s a special issue focused on two major forces shaping our campus and our world: a pandemic that has upended nearly every aspect of daily life, exacerbating systemic, structural inequalities; and the ongoing horrors of racism and brutality against Black Americans. You can read more about Williams’ responses to these forces in a letter by President Maud S. Mandel.

This issue of the magazine also creates space for more contributors than ever. At a time when our community was reeling and raw, we asked Williams people to help make sense of where we are now. Their poems, essays, stories and interviews fill this magazine. We thank them for entrusting their words and ideas to our care.

Williams Magazine is the result of measured and thoughtful writing and thinking on topics that defy easy explanation. One aspect of that work is presenting “the first rough draft of history,” as journalism has been described by Washington Post Publisher Philip L. Graham and others.

The magazine also aspires to what Claudia Rankine ’86, whose poem “Weather” appears in this issue, calls “unknowing.” As she defines it in an interview with LitHub.com, unknowing is “the will to keep questioning the things that work against the potential for a better life, a more equitable one, a more inclusive, justice-filled one.”

Both in print and online, Williams Magazine will continue to make space for complex conversations and the diversity of voices and experiences of our communities.

There’s so much more to be written. We hope you’ll keep reading.

—Amy T. Lovett, Editor in Chief

Two students assess items in the WCMA collection.

Caring for the Collection

WCMA embarks on a project to assess its 15,000 objects.

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Opportunity Granted

How All-Grant Financial Aid is shaping students’ experiences.

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Illustration of a hand supporting a smiling head emerging from a partial brick wall

Teaching Fundamentals

Professors and coaches on what they’re learning from each other.

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Photograph of woman wearing a fuschia blazer with arms crossed.

Reckoning and Responsibility

Political theorist Juliet Hooker ’94 discusses movements, monuments and the long struggle to achieve racial justice.

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Illustration of parents and a young child sitting on the edge of a diving board with feet in the water.

Navigating Uncertainty

How to develop malleability and flexibility.

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Portrait of Bret Hairston

burn

for the Black princess caught in ivory towers

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Illustration of the side of a building with views into five different windows.

Flattening the Loneliness Curve

The need for intergenerational connection.

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Illustration of seven women with arms interlocked with police cars in the background.

Promises Broken

Abolition's long history.

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Illustration of a sailboat. The sails are made of a manila folder and papers.

Grieving the Loss of Employment

The hard journey back to work.

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Illustration of a bird

Learning from Reconstruction

A turning point in our history?

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Photograph of man wear a blue shirt and orange sweater tied over his shoulders.

Struggle and Success

How two generations of the Davis family helped pave the way for Williams’ ongoing work on equity, inclusion, social justice and community building.

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Illustration of a young child standing near the edge of a hole that is shaped like a house.

Unsafe at Home

Covid-19's impact on lower-income populations.

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Portrait of Nicole Alvarez

A Williams Professor Once Told Me, “Don’t Use Your Poetry as a Soapbox”

A Williams professor once told me, “Don’t use your poetry as a soapbox”

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Illustration of people at a city intersection

Experience and Expectation

The lessons of Reinhart Koselleck.

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Illustration of a bird and protestors

Facing the Truth

Justice and equity require ”good trouble.”

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Illustration showing a woman sitting under a tree looking outwards.

On the World’s End

Apocalypse and the quest to make meaning.

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Illustration of a man walking along a fallen tree while reading a book.

Resurrecting Vanishing Narratives

The future of memory in Williamstown.

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Illustration of parent and child on a bus in New York City looking out the windows wearing protective masks.

Unmasking New York City

Though tested, the city can rebound.

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Illustration of balloons in the shape of 200 with banners and streamers.

Toward a More Perfect Williams

Marking the alumni society bicentennial.

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St. Louis Red Cross Motor Corps on duty Oct. 1918 Influenza epidemic. Photograph shows mask-wearing women holding stretchers at backs of ambulances.

Rejecting the Politics of Blame

A history of scapegoating.

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Bilal Ansari portrait

Harm and Healing

Almost fifty years after a racist incident drove his father out of Williamstown, a son begins the work of helping him—and the Williams community—to heal.

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Protecting the Food Insecure

A call for more resilient food systems.

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Illustration of five people in lab coats standing around a crystal ball.

Responding to the Virus

Will a vaccine come quickly and safely?

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Portrait of Claudia Rankine

Weather

On a scrap of paper in the archive is written I have forgotten my umbrella.

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