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Comparative Arts & Letters Humanities News
These Education Week lectures will open your mind to the ways art and architecture can change you.
Student researcher Cheynie Wray analyzes depictions of Jesus Christ as a savior, advocate, redeemer. . . and a mother.
To solve environmental issues, it’s important to examine every angle—that’s where the humanities come in.
Classical Studies students put their knowledge of Latin and Greek to the test—literally.
Africana Studies and Global Women’s Studies receive new faculty coordinators—and they both come from the College of Humanities.
Memory, film, and community—Professor Marc Yamada demonstrates how Kore-eda Hirokazu uses film techniques to create worlds that encourage community in the 2024 P. A. Christensen Lecture.
Faculty from Comparative Arts & Letters share findings from a two-year project to elevate teaching in their department.
Art history students Ivy Griffiths and Emma Belnap excel in their humanities degrees and fellowships.
What Latin poetry teaches about masculinity, human bodies, and the power of acceptance.
College of Humanities professors lecture on the power of a good book.
College faculty explain how art helps us learn about the world around us.
College of Humanities professors dive deep into Church history.