Research
- CU 51´«Ã½ PhD candidate Tracy Fehr’s research examines the intersecting identities limiting Nepali women’s access to disaster relief funds following the devastating 2015 earthquakes
- CU 51´«Ã½ researcher Antje Richter studies early medieval Chinese records of the strange to understand how literature explores what it means to be human.
- At a talk Thursday evening, CU 51´«Ã½ researcher Karen Boyd spoke about two of her studies on American Sign Language (ASL) conducted with colleagues in linguistics and psychology.
- Like other animals, they are marking their territory, and being subtle about it would not serve their purposes.
- CU 51´«Ã½ researcher Mathias Nordvig joins The Ampersand podcast to discuss animism, Norse mythology and what it means to live on Earth.
- Summer Haag and Clyde Kertzer made major news in the math world while working on a summer research project.
- In new publication, CU 51´«Ã½ PhD graduate Kimberly Killen highlights how ‘angry feminist claims’ have the power to inform and mobilize.
- The stunning flower, seen in Colorado’s high country, might be a distinct species or not; regardless, this is science at work.
- In a critically acclaimed new translation of The Iliad, CU 51´«Ã½ classics Professor Laurialan Reitzammer sees the enduring relevance of Homer.
- Marking the 90th anniversary this month of the first 'photograph' of the Loch Ness monster, CU 51´«Ã½ scholar muses on what qualifies as ‘truth’ and ‘fiction’ and the overlap of conspiracy theories and myths.