How Eunice Johnson and Ebony pioneered black representation in the fashion world
By Sydny Long | October 25, 2017In 1945, John H. Johnson founded the magazine Ebony and the fashion world underwent a massive change.
In 1945, John H. Johnson founded the magazine Ebony and the fashion world underwent a massive change.
I love all types of music; I always have.
During the Halloween season, we are accustomed to being bombarded with adaptations of myths, whether through verbal communication, literature or on screen.
From one Destroyer album to the next, the only real constant is Dan Bejar’s distinct vocals.
As Halloween approaches, Recess editor Will Atkinson and managing editor Nina Wilder have a few recommendations for conjuring up the holiday spirit.
If you’re not a graduate student — or a graduate student in the Nicholas School of the Environment, specifically — there’s a good chance you may not have heard about its leading publication, Eno Magazine.
This semester, Duke’s oldest theater group is diversifying their repertoire in more ways than one; senior Sophie Caplin is directing Duke Players’ first musical — award-winning “Once on this Island” — performed by an all-black cast.
Upon entering the main gallery of the John Hope Franklin Center, I found myself feeling slightly overwhelmed.
I’m 19 years old, and I’ve never been in a relationship.
As the story goes, Courtney Barnett, the Australian singer known for her sarcastic wit, and Kurt Vile, former guitarist of Philadelphia’s The War on Drugs, met each other at a rock music festival.
It’s been clear for many years now that Beck can do whatever he wants.
As a child, I devoured “Archie” comics, intrigued by the cutthroat, perpetual chase for Archie, the main male character, by Betty and Veronica, two female best friends, not realizing the social implications of such relationships.
In its simplest form, the lovable Fox comedy “Bob’s Burgers” focuses on working-class hero Bob Belcher (H. Jon Benjamin) and his family’s everyday struggles, from financial to relational.
To an outsider, it would seem that Hillsborough has experienced something of a musical renaissance in the last few years.
Next to the waiting room entrance in Duke Hospital, there’s a glass case, filled with swirls of color on canvas that contrast with the sterile, white walls of the rest of the building. “Imagined Places,” the small sign reads.
Anyone who knows me knows I am not an adventurous eater.
Marilyn Manson’s new album, “Heaven Upside Down,” is classically Manson, an album that fits in sonically alongside 1996’s “Antichrist Superstar” and 1998’s “Mechanical Animals.”
In a perfect world, every sitcom — no matter how jaw-clenchingly cheesy or overdone — would be like “Brooklyn Nine-Nine.”
Wolf Parade made their mark in the 2000s. The Canadian group’s 2005 debut “Apologies to the Queen Mary” was rambunctious and noisy, and it propelled the young Montreal driven indie rock movement.
Liam Gallagher is like a rebellious teenager who never grows mentally older.