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Comparative Arts & Letters Spanish & Portuguese Cinema Humanities News Literature
The JFSB displays a newly donated piece of history.
Jordan B. Jones discusses race and gender in Global Women’s Studies Colloquium.
Women may have been silent onscreen in early cinema, but backstage they were building a powerful new art form.
James Tissot experimented with painting uncommon biblical scenes that create rich resonance.
A new online database presented at the 2022 APSA conference offers a groundbreaking new way to record stories of slavery.
IC explores unique films on cultural convergence.
Associate Professor Greg Stallings (Spanish & Portuguese) may have thought that picking The Exterminating Angel to be shown at the International Cinema seemed random, but the theme of quarantine that runs throughout the movie has become especially poignant in today’s environment.
BYU Professor Kerry Soper speaks on the famous comic series The Far Side and the life of its creator, Gary Larson.
BYU’s Marlene Hansen Esplin, Assistant Professor of Interdisciplinary Humanities, shares how the study of problems of translation can lead to greater social consciousness. 
Charles Oughton’s unusual teaching method leads to victory.
Greek myths have been told time and again, but Professor Roger Macfarlane explores how these myths have been adapted to our modern culture.
Dr. George B. Handley of the Comparative Arts & Letters Department recently published his 11th book, If Truth Were a Child (2019). Unlike his previous titles—which include creative non-fiction, scholarly works, a memoir, and a novel—this book is a compilation of reflective essays analyzing the intersection between faith and intellectualism.