Humanities

  • Honors thesis reveals Vietnam War’s hidden history

    Honors thesis reveals Vietnam War’s hidden history

    As a history major at Clark University, Emily Langley ’17 became interested in studying the roles of the American and Vietnamese women who served during the Vietnam War. One thing was missing, however: primary source material about the Vietnamese women who served. So Langley took matters into her own hands. “When the opportunity to study abroad came…

  • Examining Middle Eastern history through a gender lens

    Examining Middle Eastern history through a gender lens

    Marisa Natale ’17 had never considered a major in history, let alone pursuing a doctorate in the discipline. With the encouragement of her academic adviser, Nina Kushner, however, the Clark University graduate is now applying to Ph.D. programs to study Middle Eastern history from the perspective of gender. Natale decided on her major because Kushner, associate professor…

  • Transgender author Chris Edwards to discuss new memoir at Higgins event

    Boston-area author and transgender advocate Chris Edwards will talk about his life-changing journey and read from his memoir, “BALLS: It Takes Some to Get Some,” at Clark University at 7 p.m., Thursday, March 16, in the Higgins Lounge, Dana Commons, 2nd Floor. The event is part of the Higgins School of Humanities’ spring dialogue symposium “What’s so funny?” which includes lectures, community…

  • Drawn to their art: Cartoonists on why comics go outside the lines

    Drawn to their art: Cartoonists on why comics go outside the lines

    Cartoonists James Sturm and Caleb Brown spent time at Clark on Feb. 7 talking about the joys and challenges of their profession as they opened the exhibit “Cartooning: Sense, Nonsense, Applications” at the Higgins Lounge in Dana Commons. Curated by Sturm, co-founder of the The Center for Cartoon Studies, the exhibit will be on display through…

  • Clark’s Higgins School of Humanities spring series asks ‘What’s so funny?’

    Clark’s Higgins School of Humanities spring series asks ‘What’s so funny?’

    Lectures, exhibits and films examine how humor connects and divides

  • ‘​The Dutch Moment’: Prof. Klooster’s latest book explores 17th-century empire building

    ‘​The Dutch Moment’: Prof. Klooster’s latest book explores 17th-century empire building

    In his new book, “The Dutch Moment: War, Trade, and Settlement in the Seventeenth-Century Atlantic World,” History Professor Willem Klooster delves into the ways “the Dutch built and eventually lost an Atlantic empire that stretched from the homeland in the United Provinces to the Hudson River and from Brazil and the Caribbean to the African Gold Coast.” “The Dutch…

  • Clark’s curricular innovations garner $620,000 Mellon Foundation grant

    Support to help propel Clark’s developments in humanities education

  • Close encounters of the learned kind: Science fiction emerges from the academic shadows

    Close encounters of the learned kind: Science fiction emerges from the academic shadows

    For more than a century, if a science fiction book was read in a college classroom, it likely was hidden behind a textbook or secretly propped open under a desktop. These days, however, the popular genre is no longer an alien subject in academia. Four professors have created a vibrant new learning community at Clark…