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A Novel Prize for Persian Translation
The Mo Habib Translation Prize is bringing the work of Persian writers — and translators of Persian — to an English-language audience.
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For UW Athletes, A Roman Adventure
Husky football players and other UW athletes explored Rome through a ten-day study abroad program led by Classics Professor Jim Clauss.
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Poetry for the Moon
A poem by alum Patricia Clark (BA, 1974), about a UW astronomy class she took 51 years ago, is now headed to the moon on a NASA flight.
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Analysis: Drawing, making music and writing poetry can support healing and bring more humanity to health care in US hospitals
"The COVID-19 pandemic shined a light on the deep need that people feel for human touch and connection in hospital settings. Having relatives peering through windows at their loved ones or unable to enter hospitals altogether exacerbated the lack of human intimacy that is all too common in health care settings" writes Marlaine Gray, affiliate assistant professor of anthropology at the UW.
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COMMENTARY: This AAPI month, let’s not forget Seattle’s ultraminorities
Nazry Bahrawi, Assistant Professor of Southeast Asian literature and culture, inaugurates Asian Languages & Literature's quarterly column in the Northwest Asian Weekly.
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How 'gubernatorial' steered into our language
In KUOW's new program, "Words in Review," host Bill Radke and Sarah Stroup, professor of classics at the UW, take a virtual trip to the rocky Mediterranean to learn why we say "governor," but also, "gubernatorial."
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Brian Reed Reappointed Divisional Dean of Humanities
Congratulations to Brian Reed, Milliman Endowed Chair of Humanities, who has been reappointed for an additional three-year term as Divisional Dean of Humanities.
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How AI and ChatGPT are full of promise and peril, according to 5 experts
Is AI going to kill us? Or take our jobs? Or is the whole thing overhyped? Depends on who you ask. Emily M. Bender, professor of linguistics at the UW, is quoted.
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Becoming Grammar Girl
Known to millions as Grammar Girl, successful author and podcaster Mignon Coughlin Fogarty got her start as a UW English major.
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Opinion: Christmas lights brought to you by a Jew from the Muslim world
"Americans spend more than half a billion dollars annually on 150 million units of imported Christmas lights. U.S. News & World Report ranks the best Christmas light displays. And ABC’s reality TV show “The Great Christmas Light Fight” recently premiered its 10th season. Christmas lights, in short, are not only ubiquitous but also central to American culture. But that has not always been the case. The man credited with popularizing Christmas lights in the early 20th century, Albert Sadacca, had never celebrated Christmas. In fact, he was a Jew from the Muslim world," writes Devin Naar, associate professor of history and Jewish studies at the UW.
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Public art in Seattle’s light rail stations has a deeper backstory than you’d think
Public Art is a tough genre, which might explain why most of it is so perfunctory, but a tour of Seattle's light rail stations unearths some striking artwork. School of Art + Art History + Design Assistant Professor Whitney and alum Mary Ann Peters are quoted.
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Imagining Trans Futures research cluster holds Asian American health care symposium
This week, the Imagining Trans Futures cross-disciplinary research cluster is hosting an academic symposium to bring together scholars, artists, and leaders in the transgender and Asian American communities.
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Immigrant Stories, Shared Through Poetry
As a UW senior, Ricardo Ruiz (2020) met Professor Frances McCue. Their connection led to his first book of poetry, published this year.
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UW, a jewel of Seattle, shines in global academic ranking
"UW professors and alumni are at the forefront of the arts, culture, philosophy and literature. They attract speakers and performers who contribute to the vibrancy of this culturally diverse community."
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POET LAUREATE: ADA LIMÓN
The 1998 drama graduate receives the nation's highest poetry honor.