To wrap up our Arts Special, our columnist starts an occasional series looking at rail’s relationship with literature ...
From exposing his students to underrated authors to sending out weekly mental health check-ins, Dr. James Kyung-Jin Lee is a UC Irvine professor that is devoted to his field and his students. Lee is ...
If my first lecture at Brown taught me how literature embodies love,” the student writes, “the past few days at Brown have ...
To celebrate LGBTQ+ history, Stacker created a list of LGBTQ+ books that changed the literary landscape of their time, ...
Jack Wallace, UVA’s 18th recipient of the scholarship, says critical thinking and literacy are antidotes for mistrust ...
Sometimes papers are published that overturn the conventional wisdom. Other times papers are retracted since what they ...
Ahead of a new systemwide administrative-review process, instructors are scrutinizing lessons on race, gender, and even The ...
"The rules around female behavior have changed, but the architecture of how people interact and fall in love have not," ...
Thanks to a simple but potent design, the Coyote has proven itself to be a reliable engine, which is why the brand has been ...
In the 1800s, if captured by the Apache or Comanche and chosen to be kept alive, captives often underwent initiation rituals. One such practice, described in The Boy Captives, involved using a large ...
In the nineteen-thirties and forties, young book critics on the make used to crowd outside the office of Malcolm Cowley, the literary editor of The New Republic, in the hopes of his attention.
This article was featured in New York’s One Great Story newsletter. Sign up here. The plot of every Jewish holiday goes something like this: They tried to kill us, we survived, let’s eat. On Purim, we ...