Arts & Humanities
- The Colorado Shakespeare Festival is releasing the lineup for its 2020 season, including larger than life remixes of classics, playing June 5 to Aug. 9.
- Student-athletes aren’t the only ones on campus who can be felled by injury. CU Â鶹ӰԺ’s College of Music is leading the charge to treat and—more importantly—to prevent repetitive injuries to musicians.
- The faculty director of CU Â鶹ӰԺ's Center of the American West will be in New York Oct. 13 speaking as part of the festival's 20th anniversary event, discussing the legacy of President Donald Trump.
- The CU Japanese and Japanese American Community History Project will build out archival records of Japanese and Japanese Americans on campus throughout university history.
- The inaugural production of the College of Music’s new Musical Theatre program is a few weeks away, setting the stage for what will be a very different kind of academic area at the century-old institution.
- The Intergenerational Writing course will pair 19 undergraduate students with community members over the age of 60 for semester-long research and writing projects.
- Sixteen members of the renowned Cleveland Orchestra will be in residence at the College of Music for three days in early September.
- A CU Â鶹ӰԺ graduate student, community members and survivors created a mosaic to memorialize Chicano activists killed in 1974.
- Former CU Â鶹ӰԺ Journalism Fellow Laura Krantz explores all things Bigfoot in Wild Thing, which the Atlantic named one of 2018's Best Podcasts.
- New maps of a pre-colonial African kingdom may help provide context on the origins of slaves who departed from the Bight of Benin.