In his new book, Empires of the Senses, published by Oxford University Press, Rotter offers a study of the ways that English-speaking powers — the British in India, the Americans in the Philippines — experienced the landscapes they had conquered, and how those experiences colored their beliefs about them.
Colgate Assistant Women’s Ice Hockey Coach Stefan Decosse is attempting to answer questions about the geography of hockey itself — how 21st-century economics and infrastructure are remapping the sport.
Marc Maron’s story offers important insights into the ways that negative emotionality and neuroticism develop and change; affect coping, relationships, and daily functioning; and both shape and are shaped by challenging and stressful life experiences.
In a paper published in the latest edition of Studies in Comics, Assistant Professor Paul Humphrey traces the ways that American comics have depicted characters from Afro-Caribbean identities and religions.
August 10–29, Assistant Professor Aubreya Adams sailed aboard the research vessel Sikuliaq as co-chief scientist with the Alaska Amphibious Community Seismic Experiment
Marital relationships evolve over time – even bad ones. As the degree of conflict in the home shifts, how does it affect and predict the mental health outcomes of the children who witness it?
Ten times in the past decade, Associate Professor Mike Loranty has flown to a remote research station in the Siberian settlement of Cherskiy to observe the Cajander larch firsthand.
An excerpt from Muslim Pilgrimage in the Modern World, “On Mediation and Magnetism: Or, Why Destroy Saint Shrines” — a chapter contributed by Emilio Spadola Associate Professor of Anthropology and Middle Eastern and Islamic Civilization Studies