The B-list novels of Mary Shelley; I’m in the early stages of drafting a new book about Mary Shelley, so I have to read ...
A Columbia scientist’s lab revolutionized digital photography with a new kind of imaging now used in more than a billion ...
Elizabeth Leake, the new chair of the department, looks both behind and ahead.
From science to engineering, writing to social sciences, here are the Columbians who received awards recently.
In Three or More Is a Riot, he takes readers to the front lines of conflict to uncover the meaning of it all.
Clémence Boulouque shows how this theory was built on older Jewish ideas, which offered the possibility of emancipation to ...
Volk discusses her passion for all things classical, along with other topics, with Columbia News. Check out the Columbia News ...
The Vietnamese language provides singular insight into the dynamism of premodern Asia. As John Phan, associate professor of Vietnamese Humanities in the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures ...
Among the major questions in astrophysics is the origins of the heavy elements in our Universe that make up the periodic table. The lightest elements, hydrogen and helium, were formed mainly in the ...
The cerebral cortex is the largest part of a mammal’s brain, and by some measures the most important. In humans in particular, it’s where most things happen—like perception, thinking, memory storage, ...
Over the last two decades, the United States has supported a range of militias, rebels, and other armed groups in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria. Critics have argued that such partnerships have many ...
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