‘Is education the universal escape from poverty?’

Da’juantay Wynter, a sophomore in Arts & Sciences, shares a personal story to explain the difference an education can make in lifting people out of poverty — and the need to make such opportunities more widely available.

Villhard’s new novel follows ‘go-big-or-go-home’ entrepreneur to California

Doug Villhard, a professor of practice in entrepreneurship at Olin Business School, has published his second historical fiction novel, “City of Women.” He tells a piece of the story of charismatic real-life entrepreneur E.G. Lewis, who works to build up Atascadero, Calif., as a community for progressive women and their families around the time of World War I.

Exploring the meaning of ‘screen time’

Author Phillip Maciak, a lecturer in Arts & Sciences, has published the book “Avidly Reads Screen Time,” a cultural criticism and history about our relationship with screens. Read about this and other recent works on the Source Bookshelf.

Reconfiguring the Ph.D.

Arts & Science’s William Acree describes the university’s attempt to introduce a new, highly transdisciplinary cohort model for incoming graduate students.

Rediscovering ‘The Man Who Cried I Am’

William Maxwell, a professor in Arts & Sciences, was featured on a recent episode of “LOA Live.” Hosted by the Library of America, the program, titled “Black Writers in Paris, the FBI, and a Lost 1960s Classic,” focused on the republication of John A. Williams’ 1967 novel “The Man Who Cried I Am.”
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