We explore questions of the moment—the liberal arts are truly the front page of the newspaper—and enduring questions that help us to understand the present and the past and to anticipate the future.
Cover letters can be difficult to do well. Assistant professor and faculty fellow Somayeh Dodge makes sure that her students know exactly how to write one. As part of her…
"When you work on a play with a group of people, you’re working on math ideas and spatial relationships. They might not recognize that.” Lisa Channer, associate professor of…
“Our students want to know how their learning is going to be useful for them, and we need to help them with that.” Assistant professor of philosophy and Career Readiness…
A Chicago Tribune review of a book written by our very own Patricia Hampl, Regents professor in CLA English Languages. "The job of being human," Hampl writes, "is not figuring…
Associate professor of political science Kathryn Pearson spoke with MPR about Paul Ryan's legacy and what his retirement means for the Republican party in the age of Trump.
David Grayson, a professor of musicology, is an expert on the late composer Claude Debussy, and is preparing the critical edition of Debussy's one and only completed opera.
The debate over allowing cameras in Minnesota courtrooms comes to a head as new proposed restrictions gain traction in the Legislature. Jane Kirtley, a professor of media…
Hoping to better understand the political motivations of every American, Howard Lavine, professor of political science and psychology, and Barbara Frey, director of CLA's…
Professor of African American & African Studies Keith Mayes discusses the legacy of Civil Rights Movement leader Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. on the 50th anniversary of his…