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Asian & Near Eastern Languages Comparative Arts & Letters Spanish & Portuguese Humanities Center International Cinema Humanities News Literature
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.
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.
Eight years in, Professor Dana Bourgerie highlights the progress of The Cambodian Oral History Project at Humanities Center Colloquium.
Ixcanul becomes the first IC film entirely in Kaqchikel, a Mayan language.
Where are the reminders of WWII bombing in Japan? Film Paper City investigates.
Francesca Lawson explains the historical biases behind female singing.
Kevin Blankinship says the popular press needs you.
Women may have been silent onscreen in early cinema, but backstage they were building a powerful new art form.
Florida State University's Dr. Juan Carlos Galeano addressed BYU students, faculty members, and others in a pair of lectures on January 30, 2020.
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.