Author: Roni Lakin

Anthony Petro Featured on Center Podcast

Center staff member Roni Lakin (CAS ’25) sat down with Associate Professor of Religion Anthony Petro to discuss Petro’s forthcoming book, Provoking Religion: Sex, Art, and the Culture Wars, which he completed during his time as a Jeffrey Henderson Senior Research Fellow. Tune in as they discuss protest art, ACT UP, and the strong reactions late […]

BU Humanists at Work: Alyssa Hunziker, Assistant Professor of English

When most people in the United States hear the term “Indigenous literature,” they probably assume a Native American context. For Assistant Professor of English Alyssa Hunziker, Indigenous literary studies reach beyond the United States to the Pacific Islands and Asia, where Hunziker encounters literature and communities similarly impacted by U.S. imperialism. “I’m interested in how […]

Building the Future at the National Humanities Conference

“It isn’t the time to close ourselves off to the world. This is the time to be brave…to build the future we want.” These words, spoken by Chair of the National Endowment for the Humanities Shelly C. Lowe, kicked off the day at the 2024 National Humanities Conference in Providence, Rhode Island, November 16, 2024, […]

Meet the Fellows: Holly Wiegand, PhD Candidate in English

Holly Wiegand, PhD candidate in English and Dissertation Fellow  is searching the archives and popular literature for stories from 19th-century female preachers. Her work follows the lives of preachers like Jareena Lee through memoir, testimonials, and representations of the female preacher in fiction. Learn more about the Center’s Dissertation Fellowships. Video by Roni Lakin (CAS’25, […]

Louis Chude-Sokei Delivers Fall Lecture in Criticism

November 7, the Center welcomed Professor of English and Director of African American & Black Diaspora Studies Program Louis Chude-Sokei as the speaker for its fall Lecture in Criticism. His books include the award-winning, The Last Darky: Bert Williams, Black on Black Minstrelsy, and the African Diaspora (2005), The Sound of Culture: Diaspora and Black Technopoetics (2015) and the acclaimed memoir, Floating in A Most […]

Center Awardee Jessica Buckley featured in The Brink

Check out this article from The Brink featuring 2024 recipient of the Center’s Edwin S. and Ruth M. White Prize, Jessica Buckley (CAS’25). Funded by a grant from the Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program, Buckley (CAS’25) spent her summer in BU’s Zooarchaeology Lab examining thousands of shellfish remains from two excavation sites on Chirikof Island in […]