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Spring 2024

Modeling Disability Justice, One Relative Unit of Forward Movement at a Time

April 29, 2024 by Leora Visotzky

Alison Kafer and Julie Minich are using their institutional platform — along with a financial boost from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation — to make waves in the field of disability studies

Maggie Rivas-Rodriguez Has Some Questions For You

April 29, 2024 by Kaulie Watson

An experienced journalist turned university professor, Rivas-Rodriguez is leading CMAS through its largest oral history project yet

Tom Cook’s Legacy

April 29, 2024 by Livia Blackburn

UT anthropologist Maria Franklin spotlights Black history in Bolivar, Texas

Law, Societies, and Justice for All

April 29, 2024 by Meera Hatangadi

UT’s Initiative for Law, Societies, and Justice unites scholars, researchers, students, and community organizers in the pursuit of a more equitable criminal justice system

The Re-Enfranchised, in Theory and Practice

April 29, 2024 by Lauren Macknight

Political scientist Hannah Walker explores how to bring the formerly incarcerated back into political participation.

Kingship, Godship, Scholarship

April 29, 2024 by Leora Visotzky

Azfar Moin locates the roots of secularism in the sacred kingship of Emperor Akbar

Taking the Liberal Arts on the Offensive

April 29, 2024 by Daniel Oppenheimer

How do you sell the liberal arts in a world where they’re frequently portrayed as on the decline and on the defensive?

Poetry, Goats, Revolution

April 25, 2024 by Kaulie Watson

Oksana Lutsyshyna’s new novel explores a little-known Ukrainian protest movement and the weight of change

Free Time Done Right

April 25, 2024 by Ayelet Lushkov

What should we moderns take from from both Catullus’s warnings against leisure and his embrace of it?

Eye of Guaraná

April 25, 2024 by Maureen Turner

Historian Seth Garfield tells the rich cultural and commercial story of guaraná, the world’s most caffeine-rich plant

Democracy Then

April 25, 2024 by Alex Reshanov

Classicist Naomi Campa on how studying the past can illuminate the present.

Where the Great Books Live

April 25, 2024 by Daniel Oppenheimer

The Jefferson Center for Core Texts and Ideas relies on the great books to prepare its students for the future

Hunting Oppenheimer

April 25, 2024 by Daniel Oppenheimer

Bruce Hunt regularly teaches a course at UT on the “History of the Atomic Bomb” — and he has a few quibbles with Christopher Nolan’s latest film

Falling for Vertigo

April 25, 2024 by Alex Reshanov

Students in Doug Bruster’s “‘Vertigo’ In Context” course take film analysis to new heights.

We Have the Best Stories

April 25, 2024 by Daniel Oppenheimer

Ward Keeler with U Thuhta

Ward Keeler on life as an anthropologist.

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