Division of Arts and Humanities
Who is remembered in philosophy? A University Libraries project asks anew.
CU Boulder Professor Kirk Ambrose set out to better understand art, doubt and medieval pilgrimages, but his 800-mile walk has modern implications.
CU Boulder scholar Nicole Mansfield Wright notes that Bridgerton demonstrates how fantasy can illuminate real history.- An innovative project in the Program for Teaching East Asia brings culture and history to Colorado K-12 students.
In new book, CU Boulder folklorist Jack Daly bridges the gap between academic research and Colorado legend.
Fairy Tales and the Power of Wonder: Imagining Worlds, opening Thursday at the CU Art Museum, celebrates how these magical stories take us beyond 'Once upon a time...'
In his new book 'Indigenous Tattoo Traditions,' CU Boulder alumnus and 'Tattoo Hunter' host Lars Krutak highlights traditional techniques that sometimes date back millennia.
On campus on Wednesday for a screening of his movie Roofman, CU Boulder alum Derek Cianfrance praises the professors who mentored him and talks about what motivates him today as a filmmaker.
If it doesn’t include social interaction, norms and a desire not to offend, it’s not modesty, CU Boulder philosopher Derick Hughes argues.
CU Boulder philosophy PhD student Nathan Huffine offers ‘limited foreknowledge’ to solve the paradox of human free will and an all-knowing deity.