Media Mentions

Media Mentions July 2023

The latest media mentions, quotes, profiles, and writings from Division of the Humanities faculty, students, staff, and alumni. Visit us on Twitter, LinkedIn, and Facebook for more updates.

AsiaNow Speaks with Michael K. Bourdaghs
#Asia Now
Michael K. Bourdaghs (East Asian Languages and Civilizations), discusses his book, "A Fictional Commons: Natsume Sōseki and the Properties of Modern Literature," and what led him to research and rethink the fiction and literary theories of Natsume Sōseki, often celebrated as Japan’s greatest modern novelist.

Have we ruined Sex?
The Wall Street Journal
Agnes Callard (Philosophy) explores what philosophy can teach us about the value of reciprocated desire, and the significance of sex as the ritual that enacts that desire.

‘Somehow I failed to clock her magnificence’: was the world’s first literary hero a woman?
The Guardian
Jana Matuszak (Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations) discusses why the ancient goddess Inanna might be the world’s oldest literary hero—older than Gilgamesh—the legendary warrior of ancient Mesopotamia.

Media Mentions June 2023

The latest media mentions, quotes, profiles, and writings from Division of the Humanities faculty, students, staff, and alumni. Visit us on Twitter, LinkedIn, YouTube, and Facebook for more updates

No longer ‘the place where fun goes to die’: The dean who changed University of Chicago steps down
Chicago Tribune
Eric Slauter (English Language and Literature) Comments on Dean Boyer's leadership in transforming UChicago's Core curriculum in the 1990s and how it helped sustain a place for liberal arts.

Individual variability in subcortical neural encoding shapes phonetic cue weighting
Nature
Alan C.L. Yu (Linguistics), Ming Xiang (Linguistics), and Jinghua Ou (Postdoctoral scholar in Linguistics) published this article in Nature, Scientific Reports showing that the nature of neural encoding at the sub-cortical level affects listeners' responses to vowel contrasts.

“Read it for restoratives”: Pericles and the Romance of Whiteness
Early Theatre
Noémie Ndiaye (English Language and Literature) wrote this essay that reads Pericles (1608) through the lens of early modern critical whiteness studies, underlining the relevance of Pericles’s quest through Shakespeare’s cultural moment.

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