The professor emeritus of classics died Dec. 3.
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This environmental studies course examines environmental and social histories of Black and Asian foods and food cultures in the U.S.
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This course explores the religious origins of the modern penitentiary and religious approaches to incarceration, abolition, and social justice.
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In this fine arts course, students learn the basic techniques of Chinese calligraphy, its historical roots and development, and its importance in Chinese culture
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Highlighting faculty professional activities, including conferences, exhibitions, performances, awards, and publications.
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In this visual studies course students learn the craft of digital video production and post-production through the creation of short video projects focused on the genres of speculation, especially about the future of humans and human societies, as a creative framework.
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In this first-year writing seminar, students learn to read and write, critically and purposefully, on what has become a new and highly populated public space: the internet.
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This co-taught seminar explores what it means to “do math ethically,” to emphasize the ways in which mathematics is inherently political, and to think about antiracism in mathematical disciplines.
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The professor of fine arts’ latest commission is a site-specific installation in Terminal C of the Philadelphia International Airport that was designed to bring joy and color to weary travelers.
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This chemistry course offers a quantitative approach to the description and prediction of behavior in chemical systems.
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The celebrated new novel by the associate professor of English and director of creative writing addresses Black feminism and features Bryn Mawr attendees as its main characters.
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This visual studies course examines a series of problems that beauty and other sensuous pleasures make for philosophy, film, and contemporary art.
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This intensive first-year writing seminar considers students’ fluid relationship to identities that they examine, explore, and take on through course materials.
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Students learn some of the current understanding of how galaxies in our Universe form and evolve over time, as well as the data science techniques commonly used by extragalactic researchers in their work.
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This anthropology course explores human attempts to extend sensory capacities through robots, sensors, nonhuman animals, and plants, considering how colonialism, race, disability, gender, and surveillance shape the desire to sense beyond the human.