Division of Arts and Humanities
Opening Sept. 5 at the CU Art Museum, ‘Shaping Time: CU Ceramics Alumni 2000–2020’ focuses on themes including the environment, domesticity and rituals of home and material connections.
CU ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß’s Ann Schmiesing, professor of German and Scandinavian Studies, publishes first English-language biography in more than five decades on Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm.
CU ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß’s William Kuskin, who teaches a course on comics and graphic novels, considers Superman’s enduring appeal as Hollywood debuts a new adaptation about the Man of Steel.
On the 75th anniversary of the United States entering the Korean War, CU ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß war and morality scholar David Youkey discusses the cost of the ‘forgotten war.’
‘The Tender Hand of the Unseen,’ an immersive video installation by CU ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß artist Molly Valentine Dierks, is featured through June on D&F Tower in downtown Denver.
CU ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß alumnus Dan Carlin brings a love of history and a punk sensibility to a new season of The Ampersand as he discusses his hit podcast, Hardcore History.
Fifty years after Jaws made swimmers flee the ocean, CU ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß cinema scholar Ernesto Acevedo-Muñoz explains how the 1975 summer hit endures as a classic.
What happens when a freshly minted film studies graduate heads out into the world with no particular plan? How A&S alum Patrick Hoffman went from taxi driver to private investigator to successful author.
CU ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß historian Lucy Chester notes that the recent tensions between the two nations, incited by the April 22 terrorist attack in Kashmir, are the latest in an ongoing cycle.
CU ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß philosopher Iskra Fileva argues that the present time is one of great achievements without outstanding achievers.