Oksana Lutsyshyna’s new novel explores a little-known Ukrainian protest movement and the weight of change.
![Poetry, Goats, Revolution](https://lifeandletters.la.utexas.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Lutsyshyna-by-SCHNEIDER_VALENTYNA_20230122_3954b_4x5-scaled.jpg)
Oksana Lutsyshyna’s new novel explores a little-known Ukrainian protest movement and the weight of change.
Azfar Moin locates the roots of secularism in the sacred kingship of Emperor Akbar.
Classicist Naomi Campa on how studying the past can illuminate the present.
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The 2024 Keene Prize goes to Laurel Faye for an excerpt from her novel “Seal, Wife.”
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An experienced journalist turned university professor, Rivas-Rodriguez is leading CMAS through its largest oral history project yet.
UT anthropologist Maria Franklin spotlights Black history in Bolivar, Texas.
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Historian Seth Garfield tells the rich cultural and commercial story of guaraná, the world’s most caffeine-rich plant.