In June 1972, Congress passed Title IX, prohibiting sex-based discrimination in any federal government-funded school or other educational programs. The 50...
"The Beauty in Enormous Bleakness: The Design Legacy of the Interned Generation of Japanese Americans" explores architecture’s relationship to issues of...
Chakaia Booker is renowned for her artistic practice that pushes the limits of abstraction through the use of her signature material—discarded rubber tires...
In the late 1940s and 50s, mainstream illustration was dominated by the simulated small-town charm of Norman Rockwell and the slick but false assurances of...
The Waste Land by St. Louis native TS Eliot was published in 1922 and forever changed literature. The Life in St. Louis 1888-1905: T.S. Eliot’s First Waste...
Was your New Year's resolution to be more sustainable? Here's an easy way to stick to it!
WashU School of Medicine will be piloting a composting program at...
Shakespeare’s words have become so famous that there is a quote for just about every circumstance or occasion. Though many miniature books feature an entire...
"The Play’s the Thing" exhibition celebrates the 400-year anniversary of the first folio—the first time William Shakespeare’s collected works were printed....
The hearing aids we are familiar with today are both tiny and mighty, but they weren’t always that way. This exhibit highlights the long history of hearing...
Short wavelengths of light, from the X-ray to the UV, can be used to probe the abundance and phase (solid versus gas) of the most prevalent metals in the...
The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) recently put out a memo stating that all federally funded, scientific data needs to be shared...
The WUSM Office of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion is thrilled to host Kevin Brown, the Richard S. Melvin Emeritus Professor of Law at Indiana University...
The Master of Social Policy dual-degree program at the Brown School builds critical advanced skills and knowledge for the next generation of leaders to...
The Graduate Center is partnering with the Arts & Sciences Incubator for Transdisciplinary Futures initiative to host informal lunches where graduate...
The hearing aids we are familiar with today are both tiny and mighty, but they weren’t always that way. This exhibit highlights the long history of hearing...
Thanks to the generous support of the Department of Classics, the Department of Philosophy, and the Center for the Humanities, Washington University in St....
Weijie Xu, PhD candidate, Department of Materials Science and Engineering at University of Texas at Dallas
Perovskite solar cells (PSCs) are widely seen as...
The Weidenbaum Center is honored to host Nathan Jensen, Professor in the Dept. of Government at the University of Austin-Texas, who will be speaking on how...
Please join us for a book celebration of Anca Parvulescu’s Creolizing the Modern: Transylvania Across Empires (cowritten with Manuela Boatcă), followed by a...
In collaboration with Kemper Art Museum, join museum educators in an interactive tour of Chakaia Booker's Shaved Portions (2021). The tour will highight this...
In conjunction with it search for an assistant professor in digital media, Film & Media Studies would like to invite you to a series of lectures on topics...
Black Anthology aims to tell stories about the Black experience. Our hope is that viewers are immersed, become a part of that experience, and are motivated...
The St. Louis Black Repertory Company continues its 46th Season with The Light by Loy A. Webb. Previews begin Wednesday, February 1, 2023 at the Hotchner...