News
With Christopher Nolan’s adaptation of The Odyssey opening in theaters Friday, CU Boulder classics scholar John Gibert considers why Homer’s epic is a tale that endures .
CU Boulder historians Thomas Andrews and Noah Ramage argue that the seeds of Little Bighorn, which happened 150 years ago, were planted years before Custer’s defeat.
CU Boulder Center of the American West former board member Rick Williams shares family insights into the historic battle and offers thoughts on how perceptions have changed over time.
In South Sudan, change happens when girls pick up books, says Micklina Kenyi.
As the ongoing FIFA World Cup is showing, says CU Boulder sports scholar Jared Bahir Browsh, nationalism and longtime loyalties set soccer fans apart.
A major digitization project at CU Boulder’s Natural History Museum is helping researchers around the world collaborate like never before.
Asian studies alumnus Lucas Lowenfish, soon to become a Peace Corps volunteer in Madagascar, experienced ‘a big trajectory change’ during Primates of Vietnam study abroad program.
CU Boulder political scientist Joseph Jupille says reverberations from the United Kingdom’s vote to exit the European Union are still being felt a decade later.
On an Ampersand walking tour of campus during CU Boulder’s 150th anniversary year, Professor Emeritus Paul Chinowsky weaves a tapestry of campus stories one brick at a time.
CU Boulder archaeologist William Taylor and research colleagues find evidence that far from being non-native, moose have been in the southern Rockies for centuries, likely longer