All News
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Visiting Professor of History Ty Seidule participated on two panels at the annual meeting of the American Historical Association Jan. 5 to 8. He presented “‘Making Treason Odious Again:’ Perspectives from the Naming Commission and the Army's War on the Lost Cause” and “History versus Heritage: Military Historians Confront America’s Contested Past.”
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Associate Professor of Philosophy Katheryn Doran recently posted a blog on American Philosophical Association's Current Events in Public Philosophy. In "Phronêsis, or, a Plea for Critical Thinking," she gives a critical account of what philosophers do in the classroom -- and its many uses beyond the classroom.
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Assistant Professor of Economics Mo Alloush and Professor of Economics Stephen Wu published “Income Improves Subjective Well-being: Evidence from South Africa” in the journal Economic Development and Cultural Change in January
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Professor of East Asian Languages and Literatures Zhuoyi Wang was among co-authors of “Exploring Cultural Perspectives of Mortality in Class: A Cross-Institutional Collaboration to Teach Cross-Cultural Communication with Films” in Chinese as a Second Language: The Journal of the Chinese Language Teachers Association USA.
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An article about Confucian cult rites, by Thomas Wilson, the Bates and Benjamin Professor of Classical and Religious Studies, appears in the November issue History of Religions.
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“Teaching Undergraduates Research Methods: A ‘Methods Lab’ Approach,” by government professors Heather Sullivan and Erica De Bruin, was recently published online as a FirstView article in PS: Political Science & Politics.
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Austin Briggs, the Hamilton B. Tompkins Professor of English Literature Emeritus, published a letter to the editor in the Nov. 18 issue of the Times Literary Supplement.
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“Something Came Undone,” by Professor of Religious Studies S. B. Rodriguez-Plate, was recently published in Lion’s Roar, a North American Buddhist magazine.
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Assistant Professor of Biology Peter Guiden co-authored “Reintroduced megaherbivores indirectly shape small-mammal responses to moonlight,” recently published online in the journal Ecology.
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This fall, Assistant Professor of History Mackenzie Cooley published a book and received an award from the New England Council of Latin American Studies for a co-authored article.
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