Humanities News
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What is the difference between a good poet and a great poet? Looking at the works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning, the difference appears in the emotion.
Every language has accents, and they just might reveal more about you than you think.
Of the thousands of cities in France, Paris is the most visited. However, one undergrad’s experience there shows that the City of Light is more than a prime tourist destination—it’s a learning destination too.
Who makes language rules: Rulebooks or the people who use the language? When it comes to gendered language rules, people seem the likely culprit.
A push for more research in the editing world led a group of professors and students to make TrackEDT: a tool that can change the entire editing field.
In life, uncertainty is guaranteed, but what matters most is how we face these moments and grow because of them.
This April, an IC lecture explored a unique kind of empathy shown in Chloé Zhao’s 2020 film.
Chinese is one of the most difficult languages to study, mainly because it uses thousands of characters. However, research shows that breaking characters into bite-sized pieces—known as radicals—may help.
Professors Kimberly Johnson and Patrick Madden have both been awarded the 2025 Utah Artist Fellowship for their exceptional literary work.
The difference between telling the truth and lying seems obvious, but Salem Hansen says that in a philosophical analysis it may not be so cut and dry.
This March, an IC Q&A explored the distinctive mark that people of African descent have left on Europe.
NPR recently highlighted linguistics professor Dallin D. Oaks’s research on Utah name trends—something he believes is impacted by both politics and nature.