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Comparative Arts & Letters Office of Digital Humanities Humanities News Literature
BYU-rovision packs the house with multilingual performances.
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.
IC rings in the new school year with gripping films and lectures.
Romantic Circles bridges innovative computer science with the humanities.
Charles Oughton’s unusual teaching method leads to victory.
Dive into 1800s Latter-day Saint women’s culture with a database of newspaper advertisements.
A recent historical photography exhibit invites you to consider how looking to the past can strengthen and inspire your life today.
As art museums shut down or limited their displays last spring, some looked for new ways to appreciate art while confined at home.
At BYU Education Week, Adjunct Faculty Jane G. Hinckley helped her audience rediscover Jane Austen’s “Mansfield Park” by looking into some of the factors that influenced the novel.
As part of an Education Week lecture series on finding Christ in the Humanities, Matthew Ancell helped his audience discover the hidden symbolism in Caravaggio's religious paintings.
Three BYU Classical studies students placed in the annual Maurine Dallas Watkins Greek and Latin Translation contest. Two of those same students also received the Edward Phinney Book Prize for receiving a perfect score on the College Greek Exam.