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Dana Cuff to deliver Faculty Research Lecture: Can ‘urban humanism’ reverse the housing crisis?

The professor of architecture and urban design hopes her March 7 lecture will demonstrate that small acts of research-based architecture can create powerful new forms of buildings and cities for all.

English professor Anahid Nersessian named poetry editor for Granta

“I like poetry that’s unexpected, that doesn’t conform to what’s going on in the mainstream but that’s nonetheless clearly part of an important conversation or movement,” Nersessian said.

In a world shaped by data, what happens to social justice?

A UCLA cluster course draws from the humanities and social sciences to encourage students to examine the impact of statistics and AI in a world that is increasingly being defined by datasets.

On the ‘Afterlife of Photography’: Q&A with art historian George Baker

In his new book, the UCLA professor investigates how a generation of women artists is invigorating photography in the age of digitization by returning to earlier, incomplete or unrealized moments.

Department of Spanish and Portuguese scholars collaborate on project to translate neuroscience research

A partnership with the UCLA Brain Research Institute and an education nonprofit aims to make scientific studies more accessible to Spanish speakers.

Uri McMillan receives Warhol Foundation grant for book on influential 1970s artists

“The Seventies in Color” will focus on three New York City trendsetters: fashion designer Stephen Burrows, musician-actor-model Grace Jones and fashion illustrator Antonio Lopez.

‘Art of the Benshi’ tour will showcase century-old Japanese film tradition, April 5-26

Benshi performers — the term is derived from the phrase katsudō benshi, meaning “movie orator” — were the captivating narrators of Japan’s silent film era.

Oscar Wilde’s final hours: Joseph Bristow to correct the record in lecture at Clark Library

The Clark is a fitting venue for the talk — the library is home to the world’s most comprehensive collection of Wildeiana.

Comp Lit alumna Carribean Fragoza earns prestigious creative writing award

The acclaimed writer recently earned the prestigious Whiting Award, which recognizes emerging talents with a $50,000 grant.

In memoriam: David Kunzle, 87, a founder of comics scholarship with wide-ranging interests

David Kunzle, a UCLA professor emeritus who was widely recognized as one of the founders of contemporary comics scholarship, died Jan. 1 at the age of 87. The cause was amyloidosis. Kunzle’s scholarship was unusually wide-ranging, but perhaps his signature work was the multivolume “The History of the Comic Strip,” which first appeared in 1973 as “The Early Comic Strip,” published by the University of California Press. A second volume, focusing on the 19th century, was published in 1990. He was celebrated in particular for his study of 1800s European cartoonists, according to an obituary published by the Comics Journal….