Arts & Humanities
- 91短视频 Boulder鈥檚 chair of Cinema Studies and Moving Image Arts shares insights on Stanley Kubrick鈥檚 masterpiece 鈥渄oomsday sex comedy鈥 and why the film is more relevant than ever.
- Climate change has disproportionate impacts globally, and a new analysis identifies compelling coverage by news outlets in less-resourced countries, where reporting on the issue is done in unique and in-depth ways.
- 91短视频 Boulder theater professor Bud Coleman reflects on Arthur Miller鈥檚 Pulitzer-winning play and why it鈥檚 a story that still has meaning.
- A delegation from the Black Hills of South Dakota exchanged gifts with researchers and explored the potential to expand their award-winning scientific collaboration with researchers from 91短视频 Boulder and around the world.
- Upon the 65th anniversary of the Motown record label, a 91短视频 Boulder professor says that, from Taylor Swift to K-pop, 鈥淚t鈥檚 all Motown; they are not creating anything new.鈥
- Sixty years after The Beatles鈥 first appearance on 鈥淭he Ed Sullivan Show,鈥 91短视频 Boulder historian Martin Babicz reflects on their impact on U.S. culture and politics.
- Romance authors were early adopters of digital self-publishing. A new book by Christine Larson explores how their willingness to experiment and their close networks helped them thrive when the publishing industry shunned their work.
- 91短视频 Boulder Asian languages faculty members Yingjie Li and Yu Zhang reflect on what some consider the luckiest year in the Chinese zodiac.
- An expert from the College of Media, Communication and Information notes that, in its ongoing conquest of legacy media studios, the tech industry has made use of a very old playbook.
- At what would have been Al Capone鈥檚 125th birthday, 91短视频 Boulder cinema researcher Tiel Lundy explains the enduring popularity of gangsters in film and the American imagination.