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Who wrote the Bible? In new book, upcoming lecture, William Schniedewind offers bold new answers

“It’s important to think of the Bible as an anthology of ancient Jewish communities as opposed to a singular voice,” says the director of the UCLA Alan D. Leve Center for Jewish Studies.

In Fowler Museum exhibition, ancient Peruvian objects reveal search for meaning, connection with nature

Art historian Stella Nair says the collection shows that the Moche and Nasca societies “were acutely aware of the entire ecological system in which they lived.”

Chamber Music at the Clark raises the curtain on 30th season

The renowned Calidore String Quartet performed in a concert dedicated to Peter Hanns Reill, founder of the series.

Workshop focuses on exploitation of Nile in arts of ancient northeastern Africa

Egyptian and Sudanese scholars met to discuss the destruction of cultural heritage in the Nile in the ancient past and contemporary present.

Sixiang Wang honored for book that reframes 3 centuries of Korea-China relations

“Boundless Winds of Empire” earned the Hong Yung Lee Book Award from the UC Berkeley Center for Korean Studies.

SNF Center for Hellenic Studies co-presents performance by Cappella Romana vocal ensemble

Much of the music in the program was receiving its first modern performance during a trio of weekend concerts.

In her first book for young readers, Teddi Chichester aims to inspire compassion for wildlife

“Wildlife Crossings of Hope” examines what happens when highways and other urban infrastructure confine animals to small patches of land.

In memoriam: Paul D. Sheats, 92, whose love for the outdoors intertwined with Wordsworth scholarship

He was “universally regarded as one of the kindest, warmest and most thoughtful people in the history of the English department,” said department chair Saree Makdisi.

Ursula Heise honored by BBVA Foundation for global influence in environmental humanities

The director of UCLA’s Lab for Environmental Narrative Strategies was lauded for having “explored the varied shapes that environmental thought, narrative and activism take in different regions of the world.”

Examining the AI revolution through a humanistic lens

Will artificial intelligence make us happier, healthier, smarter? Or merely unemployed? It’s a reckoning 70 years in the making.