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Features

A Selfless Art

October 30, 2023 by Leora Visotzky

A wanderer (and COLA alum) puts down roots and grows communities.

Ashley Bennett, son of photographer H.H. Bennett, jumping to Stand Rock, caught in midair by the instantaneous shutter. Modern print from original stereograph negative half, 1886.

Pictures Snapping into Place

October 30, 2023 by Michael Agresta

Steven Hoelscher brings a geographer’s critical eye to the study of photography and history.

How Maps Can Kill: Lessons in Critical Cartography

October 30, 2023 by Alex Reshanov

Steven Seegel exposes the distortions, biases, and hidden agendas behind the seemingly objective art of cartography.

Old Threads, New Threads

October 30, 2023 by Leora Visotzky

Faegheh Shirazi weaves a career in cultural textiles.

Michael Ray Charles

The Scholar and the Artist

October 30, 2023 by Daniel Oppenheimer

Cherise Smith looks at Michael Ray Charles looking at the world.

Lisa Moore

Lisa Moore Is Picking Up What They’re Putting Down

September 21, 2023 by Maureen Turner

As a young scholar and critic, Lisa Moore was driven by a deceptively simple desire: “I really wanted to see myself in literature and art, because I love literature and art and I felt that it was wrong if my experience had not been represented there.”

blood in the water cover

Blood in the Water: A Graphic Story

September 5, 2023 by Coyote Shook

A graphic story by American Studies Ph.D. student and cartoonist Coyote Shook that explores the shark-related research of American Studies professor Janet Davis, one of Shook’s advisors, in the context of Shook’s own work as well as the broader field of “blue humanities.”

Emma poster

Austen in Austin

August 16, 2023 by Imani Evans

When UT Austin’s Harry Ransom Center, world-renowned for its rare books and manuscripts, wanted to tell a fresh story about Jane Austen, it needed to team up with an Austen scholar willing to go places the HRC couldn’t. That scholar? Janine Barchas.

Ghosts in the Machine: Digital forensics and the race against the technological clock

March 27, 2023 by Kaulie Watson

Jacques Derrida, the famous philosopher, thought the advent of digital word processing meant the end of the draft. Thorsten Ries and a team of researchers are proving him wrong — and pushing the boundaries of digital forensics in the humanities.

The Oracle of the Enlightenment 

March 27, 2023 by Michael Agresta

How did one of the 18th century’s greatest students of Rome become its foremost voice for balance and moderation in the construction of the modern state?

The McCrackenaissance

March 27, 2023 by Kaulie Watson

A few things to know about Elizabeth McCracken: She’s hilarious on Twitter. She likes to spend her mornings swimming in Austin’s Barton Springs Pool. She’s not wild about the term “autofiction,” and her new book, “The Hero of This Book,” is definitely a novel, not a memoir.

Laws of the Lands: Exploring the World’s Constitutions

March 22, 2023 by Alex Reshanov

There are almost two hundred countries with constitutions currently in existence, and their contents vary considerably. The Comparative Constitutions Project has been documenting and analyzing them for almost two decades, creating a set of resources for scholars and non-scholars along the way.

nahid siamdoust

Iran and Back Again: Talking with Nahid Siamdoust

March 2, 2023 by Daniel Oppenheimer

Nahid Siamdoust left Iran with her family toward the end of the Iran-Iraq War, after an Iraqi bomb hit her elementary school, killing a number of students. In the decades since, she has lived a truly global life.

[Monday 12:57 PM] Oppenheimer, Daniel J Pencil drawing by Adeoye Hassan, from a reference photo by Michael Efionayi. Courtesy of Toyin Falola. 

May my child become like Toyin!

January 27, 2023 by Vik Bahl

College of Liberal Arts alumnus Vik Bahl talks to his mentor, African and African Diaspora Studies professor Toyin Falola, about Falola’s globe-spanning career as a scholar of African and a building of the discipline of African Studies.

K-Drama, K-Pop, K-Places: The Research of Youjeong Oh

October 21, 2022 by Kaulie Watson

Oh investigates how Korean cities and regions use popular culture, particularly television dramas and K-pop, to promote themselves to an expanding audience of ardent fans. But pop culture is always a bit of a gamble, and it’s not always clear who — or where — benefits from sudden stardom.

The Way of Roger

October 21, 2022 by Kaulie Watson

Roger Reeves’ latest poetry collection, Best Barbarian, is part jazz song, part fever dream, part mythic reimagining. “For me, the barbarian is the achievement of something that is recognizably outside and potentially threatening, not because it seeks to be but just because it’s making a way and a life of being possible. It’s about self-love. Being your best barbarian is really about loving yourself, and that is completely different from the normal.”

Abimbola Adelakun

Huge in Nigeria: Q&A with Abimbola Adelakun

October 21, 2022 by Daniel Oppenheimer

In the U.S., Abimbola Adelakun is a respected junior academic, first a graduate student and now an assistant professor in the Department of African and African Diaspora Studies at The University of Texas at Austin. In her native Nigeria, Adelakun is “a bit famous.” She is the author of a weekly political column for Punch, one of the most widely read newspapers in the country.

Julieta Suárez Calderón

Talking to Julieta Suárez Calderón, 2022 Randy Diehl Prize Winner

July 1, 2022 by Johnny Holden

The $18,000 award, now in its seventh year, was established by donors to support a graduating liberal arts senior who is committing the year after graduation to effect positive change in the world by working for a nonprofit organization, working for a for-profit organization that benefits others, or creating a new nonprofit.

The Danger Imperative: Reckoning With the Perception of Violent Threat in American Police Culture

May 26, 2022 by Alex Reshanov

In July 2016, a gunman ambushed Dallas police officers, killing five, injuring an additional nine (along with two civilians), and fueling public rhetoric about a so called “war on cops.” At the time of the Dallas shooting, Michael Sierra-Arévalo, now an assistant professor of sociology at The University of Texas at Austin, was doing fieldwork […]

The Sequencing of our Success: Q & A with Kathryn Paige Harden

May 26, 2022 by Alex Reshanov

In her book, The Genetic Lottery: Why DNA Matters for Social Equality, psychology professor Kathryn Paige Harden explores how genes contribute to variation in complex life outcomes such as educational attainment and income level. She argues that understanding genetic impacts on these outcomes could and should be used to promote greater equity among individuals with […]

The Pilgrimage of Professor Latinx: Frederick Luis Aldama and the Making of an Academic Superhero

May 26, 2022 by Emily Nielsen

The origin story of Frederick Luis Aldama, professor of English at The University of Texas at Austin and academic superhero “Professor Latinx,” begins with a bus trip his mother took before he was born. She set out from her home in East Los Angeles toward Guatemala, intending to meet family members she’d only heard about […]

A Love Letter to Black Austin

May 4, 2022 by Kacie Vanecek

Interview with Lisa B. Thompson and Richard Reddick on Their New Black Austin Matters Podcast Black Austin Matters, a new podcast from KUT and KUTX Studios, aims to give voice to the daily experiences of Black Austinites, while deepening mutual understanding throughout the broader Austin community. We spoke to its hosts and co-producers, College of […]

UT in Ukraine

A Community of Scholars and Students Responds to the War in Ukraine

April 4, 2022 by Mary Neuburger

As Director of the Center for Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies (CREEES) and a historian of Eastern Europe, I am writing to share with you how the faculty and students of our center are responding to this horrific moment.

Q&A on the War in Ukraine with Professor Joan Neuberger, Department of History

March 31, 2022 by Leora Visotzky

Joan Neuberger, a professor of history at The University of Texas at Austin, studies modern Russian culture in social and political context, with a focus on the politics of the arts. Her most recent book, This Thing of Darkness: Eisenstein’s Ivan the Terrible in Stalin’s Russia (Cornell: 2019), won the American Historical Association’s George L. Mosse Book […]

The Linguistics Research Center Celebrates 60 years of Innovation and Scholarship

March 29, 2022 by Alex Reshanov

Imagine a website that allows people from a variety of academic and non-academic backgrounds to learn ancient languages and research their histories. Now imagine it existing in 1999, way back in the early years of the internet. That’s the year the Linguistics Research Center (LRC) launched its free, online lesson series. The internet was a […]

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