Skip to main content

College News

13 results found
Comparative Arts & Letters English Linguistics Spanish & Portuguese English Language Center Humanities Center Humanities News
According to Associate Professor Anna-Lisa Halling, playwriting gave nuns unprecedented freedom—which may explain why it became so popular.
How do you know when a novel is well translated? The key lies in keeping the author’s voice.
Who decides what makes “good” design? According to Associate Professor Jamie Horrocks, Victorian design reformers thought they did.
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.
El Santo versus the establishment—How film institutions overlook Mexico's favorite luchador.
Linguistics faculty help train missionaries as basic English language teachers to enter Mongolia.
Francesca Lawson explains the historical biases behind female singing.
What does a future with AI translation look like?
Wickman awarded for his efforts in exploring faith through literature.
Adjunct Professor Madeleine Dresden highlights common racist tropes and stereotypes in writing and offers solutions and alternatives for more diverse and inclusive writing for BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and People of Color) communities.
For the last five centuries, book publishing played a remarkable role in preserving Welsh identity and language in the face of external cultural and linguistic challenges.