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French & Italian Office of Digital Humanities Humanities News Literature
BYU professors honored for their work on 19th-century French depictions of members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
BYU’s International study programs lead student Austin Nelson to new heights at the Paris Air Show.
BYU faculty and students present at Digital Humanities Utah.
Learn how the simple farmer became a villain in French popular culture.
Professor Jim Law studies the evolution of French using Bible translations.
Double the celebration: Maren and Sonja Mecham bond through their shared graduate experience.
AI won’t replace teachers anytime soon, but it can be used for language learning and teaching, explains Rob Reynolds.
The Language Acquisition Research Colloquium series explores how to optimize course content to help students meet language goals.
Marc Olivier gives P. A. Christensen Lecture on incorporating educational play into teaching and research.
The French and Italian Clubs go head-to-head to prove who has the better food.
Albert Camus’ novel depicts the city of Oran, Algeria during a contemporary outbreak of the plague. While there are obvious parallels between the plague in the novel and the peste brune (the brown plague, a nickname for the Nazis who occupied France during World War 2), by transforming the threat into an act of nature, Camus shifts the focus from human cruelty to the many reactions to suffering: some pretend it doesn’t exist, some try to escape it, others accept it and try to alleviate pain.
Professor Marc Olivier presented on the history and intersection of fashion and film.