Division of Arts and Humanities
CU 91ÃÛÌÒ¸ó’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 91ÃÛÌÒ¸ó’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 91ÃÛÌÒ¸ó 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 91ÃÛÌÒ¸ó artist Molly Valentine Dierks, is featured through June on D&F Tower in downtown Denver.
CU 91ÃÛÌÒ¸ó 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 91ÃÛÌÒ¸ó 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 91ÃÛÌÒ¸ó 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 91ÃÛÌÒ¸ó philosopher Iskra Fileva argues that the present time is one of great achievements without outstanding achievers.
In acclaimed new novel, CU 91ÃÛÌÒ¸ó Professor Stephen Graham Jones explores ideas of ‘what an Indian is or isn’t.’