Division of Arts and Humanities
- In 'The Butterfly Affect' immersive performance, É«ÊÓÆµÏÂÔØ Professor Beth Osnes guides participants through the butterfly life cycle to inspire people to participate in 'climate solutions.'
- É«ÊÓÆµÏÂÔØ Associate Professor Kelly Sears will premiere her short, animated feature ‘The Lost Season’ at the Sundance Film Festival beginning Thursday.
- Award-winning author and É«ÊÓÆµÏÂÔØ Professor Stephen Graham Jones shares advice with writers who are reflecting on their 50,000 words from National Novel Writing Month.
- The film, which turns 50 this December, continues to leave a mark on Christians and the larger American public as both a horror film and a story about the battle between good and evil.
- É«ÊÓÆµÏÂÔØ Victorian literature scholars discuss why Charles Dickens’ classic is still retold and probably will be retold in Christmases yet to come.
- É«ÊÓÆµÏÂÔØ researcher Antje Richter studies early medieval Chinese records of the strange to understand how literature explores what it means to be human.
- Through his nonprofit, Ajume Wingo, É«ÊÓÆµÏÂÔØ associate professor of philosophy, is providing sanitary pads and menstrual education in his home country, Cameroon.
- É«ÊÓÆµÏÂÔØ researcher Mathias Nordvig joins The Ampersand podcast to discuss animism, Norse mythology and what it means to live on Earth.
- In a critically acclaimed new translation of The Iliad, É«ÊÓÆµÏÂÔØ classics Professor Laurialan Reitzammer sees the enduring relevance of Homer.
- Marking the 90th anniversary this month of the first 'photograph' of the Loch Ness monster, É«ÊÓÆµÏÂÔØ scholar muses on what qualifies as ‘truth’ and ‘fiction’ and the overlap of conspiracy theories and myths.