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Six unique majors that may not be on your radar
Interested in the College of Arts & Sciences but don’t know what to study? Here are six majors that you may not have discovered yet.
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OPINION: Black Life is Disrupted
UW students, alumni, and faculty explain how COIVD-19 has disrupted Black life.
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As a Black mother-to-be, Iām already full of heartache
Maya Angela Smith, associate professor of French, writes about her experience as a Black mother-to-be.
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From Paris to Penguins
French and oceanography major Anna Sulc has traveled the world for her humanities and biology research.
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UW books in brief: Chinese funerary biographies, skin lighteners through history, NYC neighborhood gentrification study, Arthurian verse-novel in translation
Recent notable books by University of Washington faculty members look at gentrification and inequity in a New York neighborhood, skin lighteners though history, female agency in Arthurian legend and biographical epitaphs in China across many centuries.
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A Life Study
Grace Flott (BA, International Studies | French, 2013) shares her experiences in expressing grief, trauma, and disability through artwork.
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ArtsUW Roundup: Visit the Burke Museum, attend a Sankai Juku performance, and more.
This week in the arts, attend a Washin Kai recital in classical Japanese, listen to the musical musings of Indigo Mist, converse over coffee, and more.
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Students & Superlatives
Eight exceptional Arts & Sciences students have been selected as 2019 Dean's Medalists and Graduate Medalists.
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Taking Language to Court
As a court interpreter, Kenneth Barger (BA, 2014) has helped hundreds of litigants be understood.
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Pre-Med, Italian Style
A UW pre-med student explains why her academic major ā Italian ā will make her a better doctor.
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Why Black Panther is Destined for Commercial Success
Op-ed by Maya Smith, assistant professor in the French and Italian Studies Department at the UW.
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Embracing the World, One Language at a Time
For Martin Horst, with majors in French and linguistics, language is a bridge to other cultures.
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The Humanities Get Personal
A new online course introduces students to the humanities through A&S faculty's personal stories and favorite artifacts.
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Renaissance Europe Was Horrified by Reports of a Sea Monster That Looked Like a Monk Wearing Fish Scales
In the 16th century, the so-called “sea monk” became the talk of Europe. Drawings of the half-man, half-fish “monster” were circulated across the continent.