‘Horns on film’
Essayist and American culture critic Gerald Early writes a piece in the latest edition of his online journal, The Common Reader, offering an overview of notable films about jazz trumpeters.
‘Why the stakes are so high for the Black Panther’
Rebecca Wanzo, of Arts & Sciences, writes a piece for The Conversation about the Black Panther, both the one headed to movie screens and Ta-Nehisi Coates’ new comic series on the storied character.
‘Staging political transformation in 1950s West German film’
German film scholar Jennifer Kapczynski, of Arts & Sciences, discusses on the Center for the Humanities website her book project looking at how films portrayed West Germany’s changing postwar ideology.
‘How to create a neuroscience pipeline’
Biologist Erik Herzog, of Arts & Sciences, talks about efforts to get young people, from grade school on up, interested in neuroscience careers. He shares university efforts toward that end on “Hold That Thought.”
Barmash edits book on the Exodus
Pamela Barmash, associate professor of Hebrew Bible and Biblical Hebrew in Arts & Sciences, is co-editor of a new interdisciplinary book of scholarly essays on “Exodus in the Jewish Experience: Echoes and Reverberations” (Lexington Books).
Medicine’s Curiel publishes gene therapy book
David Curiel, MD, PhD, professor of radiation oncology at the School of Medicine, has just published the second edition of “Adenoviral Vectors for Gene Therapy.” The book explains gene-delivery vehicles based on the adenovirus, an emerging tool in treating disease.
‘The many lives of Michelangelo’
William Wallace, an art historian in Arts & Sciences and author of “Michelangelo: The Artist, the Man, and his Times,” discusses how documents — including an extremely rare one in University Libraries’ Special Collections — provide a window into Michelangelo’s life and art for “Hold That Thought.”
Opening doors (and accounts) at tax times
Michal Grinstein-Weiss and Jane Oliphant, of the Brown School’s Center for Social Development, write a blog on the New America site about the importance of savings and the opportunities that tax refunds present.
‘Sorry, you can’t speed read’
Psychologists Rebecca Treiman and Jeffrey Zacks, of Arts & Sciences, write an op-ed in The New York Times about efforts to improve reading speed (and warning there are no easy shortcuts if you want to retain what you read).
‘Unlawful assembly as social control’
John Inazu, of the School of Law, writes in the UCLA Law Review about the offense of unlawful assembly and argues that the modern approach can give law enforcement too much discretion, encroaching on people’s First Amendment rights.
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