Accomplishments: College of Liberal Arts
Roberto Lovato (English) wrote in The Nation magazine about the most important message coming out of the immigration crisis in Los Angeles: "Nos Tienen Miedo Porque No Tenemos Miedo (They Fear Us Because We Do Not Fear Them)."
John Curry (History) presented a paper titled, "Setting the General Crisis of the Long Seventeenth Century in Comparative Contexts: How Do the Ottomans Fit?," at the SHIFA-ANAMED international workshop on "Death and Disease in Anatolia." The meetings took place at the Anatolian Civilizations Research Center (ANAMED) at Ko莽 University in鈥
John Curry (History) traveled to the University of Munster in Germany to present as part of the Translation and Multilingualism in Mongol and Post-Mongol Eurasia workshop. He presented a paper titled, "Speaking Chinese, Translating Persian: Strategies of the Autograph Manuscript of Al墨 Akbar Kha峁亂墨鈥檚 Book of China," as part of a panel鈥
Christopher D. E. Willoughby (African American Studies; Interdisciplinary, Gender & Ethnic Studies) published the article "John Collins Warren鈥擩ournal Founder, Institution Builder, and Racial Theorist" in the June 12 issues of the New England Journal of Medicine. Written in collaboration with scholars from Harvard Medical鈥
Matthew Schurr and Brenna Renn (Psychology) published "Relation Between Executive Function Test Performance and Treatment Outcomes During Brief Psychotherapies for Later-Life Depression" in the American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry: Open Science, Education, and Practice. Schurr, an alumni of the 黑料网 Clinical Psychology Ph.D. program and Renn's鈥
Tim Gauthier (Interdisciplinary, Gender, and Ethnic Studies) presented a paper, "Recent American Fiction and the Affective Heritage of 9/11," at the 26th Annual International Conference of the English Department at the University of Bucharest.
Tyler D. Parry (Interdisciplinary, Gender, and Ethnic Studies) appeared on KNPR's State of Nevada on May 22 to discuss the five year anniversary of George Floyd's death and the degree to which it has impacted policing in southern Nevada and throughout the country.
Margaret Harp (World Languages & Cultures) presented a paper, "Statuary as Atonement: Funereal Expression in Le Printemps d'Yver鈥 at the 57th annual meeting of the Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance Association.
Paul Werth (History) has received a grant from the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research for work in the Georgian State Historical Archive (Tbilisi) and the library of the Oriental Pontifical Institute (Rome) on the history of the Armenian Apostolic Church in the 19th-century Russian Empire.
Karyn S. Hollingsworth (Liberal Arts) was quoted in The Chronicle of Higher Education special report Raising Your College鈥檚 Profile in a section on communicating about DEI. She shared ways university communicators can continue to support diversity, equity, and inclusion work while complying with anti-DEI laws. Suggestions鈥
Kara Christensen Pacella and graduate students Hoor Ul Ain and Rosha Feizilighvan (all Psychology) presented their work at the International Conference for Eating Disorders in San Antonio, TX. Ain and Feizilighvan presented their posters, "Fasting Motivations in Muslim Women" and "ED-Motivated Sleep Behaviors are Associated with Higher ED-Related鈥
Graduate student Shannon Sagert and faculty mentor Kara Christensen Pacella (both Psychology) published a new study examining the association between imposter syndrome symptoms and eating disorder pathology in the Journal of American College Health. Sagert found that as imposter syndrome symptoms increased among college students, risk of鈥