The associate professor of philosophy discusses writing and producing 80 Years Later, a new documentary about racial inheritance and Japanese American incarceration.
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Headline Archive for Rebecca Raber
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The scholarship will support the history and Russian double major’s intensive language-immersion program in Tbilisi, Georgia this summer.
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This first-year writing seminar explores the biggest questions in the Universe, along with other recent developments in astrophysics via a series of writing assignments.
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Joie Ling ’20, Abi Mumme-Monheit ’20, and Camille Samuels ’21 received fellowships from the National Science Foundation that will support their graduate education and research.
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The assistant professor of biology was awarded $421,197 from the National Institutes of Health to support her research on RNA-binding proteins.
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This economics course, cross-listed in political science, explores the relationship between policy and economic outcomes in the United States, including the causes of rising inequality and its effects on American democracy.
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This comparative literature and Spanish course explores, from a specifically Iberian perspective, the different ways humans have defined themselves in relation to animals in literary texts, cultural artifacts, and early philosophy.
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This mathematics class is a probability-based survey of several finance topics, including exploring the mathematical foundation of derivatives.
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The grant from the National Science Foundation will support the assistant professor of chemistry’s work in alkyne spectroscopy.
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The class traces the history of African American comedy and situates it specifically in relation to the civil rights struggles and the politics of African American Islam.
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This religion course examines grassroots democratic coalitions and movements, and considers how they try to forge solidarity and build power across religious and racial divides.
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The recent Oxford graduate, who discovered a monoclonal antibody that potentially prevents malaria, will use this fellowship to help support his final two years of medical school at the University of California, San Diego.
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The linguistics major will spend next year in Luxembourg teaching English in the tiny, multilingual nation, where she also hopes to learn French.
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This music course considers some of the many intersections between music and gender during the European Middle Ages, with particular attention to the roles of women as performers, composers, patrons, and audiences.
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The recent political science major and economics minor will use her award to study the relationship between local and international non-governmental organizations.