Arts & Humanities

Alum Claire Marie Stancek: "For as long as I can remember, I’ve been bewitched by the sound of language, rhythm, repetition, and an unnameable something that’s akin to prayer."

December 4, 2024
Claire Marie Stancek, L&S alum and English professor, speaks about her book, wyrd] bird.

In this interview, Claire Marie Stancek shares the inspirations behind wyrd] bird, a deeply personal and experimental work that blends a diverse range of genres, including lyric essay, dream journal, poetry, and scrapbook. Written during a period of profound personal upheaval, the book engages with themes of grief, political turmoil, and the climate...

Berkeley Voices: As crises escalate, so does our fascination with cults

December 2, 2024

Like millions of other Americans, UC Berkeley Professor Poulomi Saha watched a lot of docuseries about cults during the COVID-19 pandemic. The more Saha watched, the more they felt a kind of change within themself. “I was absolutely enthralled,” said Saha. “My reaction no longer fit that old script, the script that I had internalized. I wasn’t just having a passing interest. I wasn’t sort of mildly terrified. I was thinking, “Oh, wow, that makes good sense.’” Saha wanted to understand why.

So they started a class, called Cults in Popular Culture, where Saha and their...

Exploring Mysticism, Aesthetics, and Experience: An Interview with Professor Niklaus Largier

November 8, 2024

Niklaus Largier is Chair in the department of Comparative Literature, is a professor in the departments of German and Comparative Literature, and is affiliated with the Programs in Medieval Studies, Religious Studies, and the Designated Emphasis in Critical Theory.

His scholarship covers an extensive range of interests, including the intersections of literature, philosophy, theology, and other fields of knowledge within medieval and early modern German literature. Professor Largier’s work delves into topics such as ascetic practices, eroticism, and the literary imagination, as well...

New Townsend Center gift honors visionary founder

November 7, 2024

The Doreen B. Townsend Center for the Humanities will boost its fellowship and Art of Writing programs thanks to a generous gift from Matt and Margaret Jacobson. The couple pledged $750,000 to create the Paul Alpers Memorial Fund, honoring the founding director of UC Berkeley’s renowned nexus of humanities research and events.

“We feel so loved,” said Stephen Best, the center’s current faculty director, about the Jacobsons’ support. “I don't have a better way of expressing how deeply appreciative we are to have two people who get what we do and want to see us...

Remains and Resistance: Native Voices’ ‘Antíkoni’

November 7, 2024

The burial rites at the heart of Sophocles’s famous tragedy Antigone can seem arcane to many contemporary Western audiences. But a new adaptation at Los Angeles’s Native Voices, Beth Piatote’s Antíkoni, reimagines the play as a complicated, humanizing tragedy about a Nez Perce family living in our nation’s capital, and caught between the pressures of the outside world and a nationalist party that threatens to silence their history. Merging Nez Perce storytelling with the struggle over ancestors...

Interview: From Biology to Medieval Musicology: Saagar Asnani on Embracing a Passion for the Humanities

November 6, 2024

Saagar Asnani is a graduate student in Musicology and Medieval Studies. He focuses particularly on the regions of France, Italy, Occitania, and Catalonia. He works mainly with the relationship between language and music, as his research bridges sociohistorical linguistics with musicology. Saagar earned his MA from UC Berkeley in 2022, and BA in Music, French and Biology from University of Pennsylvania.

How did you decide to pursue a graduate degree in Berkeley’s Department of Music? Is there any advice that you have for undergraduates, who are interested in pursuing graduate...

Times Higher Ed ranks UC Berkeley No. 1 public university in U.S.

October 16, 2024

UC Berkeley is the No. 1 public university in the U.S and the eighth-best university in the world, according to the Times Higher Education’s 2025 World University Rankings, released on Oct. 8. Berkeley has held the ranking of top U.S. public university for nine of the past 10 years.

This year’s rankings evaluated more than 2,000 universities from 115 countries and territories and were based on five criteria: teaching, research environment, research quality, industry...

World Humanities Report, directed by UC Berkeley's Sara Guyer, warns of extinction risk to human knowledge

October 14, 2024

What role do the humanities play in a world challenged by climate change, rising authoritarianism, censorship, racism, wars and collapsed economies?

The humanities and their forms of historical, visual and cultural literacy are critical to understanding and addressing the human experience and the planet’s survival, says Sara Guyer, dean of the Division of Arts and Humanities in UC Berkeley’s College of Letters and Science.

She should know: Guyer is director of the prestigious World Humanities Report, a major...

Department of Music opens new performance hall on campus

October 10, 2024

UC Berkeley’s Department of Music unveiled the new Helen and Thomas Wu Performance Hall in September, following an extensive renovation that was years in the making. The reopened space includes a larger stage, new seats, and state-of-the-art sound, lighting, and digital technology upgrades.