Articles By: Anita Joseph
Anita Joseph is a blog writer for the Harvard Political Review. She is from West Windsor, NJ and she likes watermelon. This is filler text. Hopefully you replace it with your own content because otherwise everyone will read these banal words instead of drinking in the wonderful spontaneity, creativity, humility, gentility, and hybridity of your personality. Hello reader who has made it this far! Thanks for stopping by the Internet home of the Hah-vahd Club of Intellectual Bromanticism. There is snow on the ground outside, and it looks cold. This page will self-destruct in 30 seconds.

Anita Joseph / March 4, 2012 11:16 pm

The Way We Eat Now

Though we often treat eating as a joyless obstacle, being social during meals is especially important to our college experience and the development of good relationships.

Anita Joseph / February 18, 2012 7:44 pm

Lin vs. Zuckerberg: Choosing the Better Model for Harvard Leadership

Harvard students should follow the example of Jeremy Lin

Anita Joseph / November 11, 2011 8:26 pm

Bollywood and India’s Anti-Corruption Movement

No One Killed Jessica

Anita Joseph / January 19, 2011 5:16 pm

Free the Toys!

Does a wooden wind-up cowboy really have three movies worth of material in him? Surprisingly, yes. I thoroughly enjoyed Toy Story 3, and only wish that Woody, Buzz, and the others would stop being such, well, toys. Toy Story 3 takes place around ten years after the second movie. Andy, the toy’s young owner, is about to head off to ... Read More

Anita Joseph / December 20, 2009 8:28 pm

Evaluating the Evaluators

Balancing the personal and the statistical in teacher assessments

Anita Joseph / April 2, 2009 1:36 am

Racial Politics Remade

Can black politicians transcend race? Barack Obama was an unlikely standard-bearer for black politicians. He did not work his way up through the ranks of the black establishment and his ties to the old guard of black politics like Jesse Jackson or John Lewis are tenuous and recent. His political presentation is not traditionally “black,” but as the broader appeal ... Read More

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