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 Science fiction landscape

Article

Book presents alternative cultural history of science fiction

Conventional wisdom about science fiction is that it has followed the same diffusionist patterns as the advancement of industrial capitalism. Anindita Banerjee challenges that notion in her new anthology.
Artist's rendering of Kepler 10b

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Planet hunter to give update on search for life in the universe

Natalie Batalha, astrophysicist and planet hunter, will describe Kepler’s legacy and preview planned follow-up missions in the 2018 Carl Sagan Distinguished Lecture at Cornell, Dec. 5 at 7 p.m. in Call Auditorium.
 art installation of Hercules story showing the path of virtue

Article

Classics students create art installations on Hercules story

Student displays illustrated Hercules' fabled choice between pleasure and virtue.
 Three of the musicians from Big Galute holding their instruments

Article

Cornell’s Jewish Studies Program presents 'Monish' in NYC

Cornell's Jewish Studies Program, the Center for Jewish History and the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research present "Monish: A Musical Tale of Talmud and Temptation," set to rhyming English verse.
 Front cover of the Philosophical Review

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Philosophical Review voted best by wide margin

In an on-line poll of more than 600 philosophers, the Sage School’s Philosophical Review has been voted the best general journal of philosophy by a wide margin -- 371-165 over its nearest rival.
 Locally grown dance fest poster

Article

Mini Locally Grown Dance concert at the Schwartz Center

The Department of Performing and Media Arts (PMA) presents its annual Mini Locally Grown Dance concert Nov. 29-Dec. 1 at the Schwartz Center for the Performing Arts.

PMA senior lecturers Jumay Chu and Byron Suber direct and each contributes original choreography. The concert also features a combined piece choreographed by 16 students in Chu and Suber’s dance composition course; a duet from Deanna Myskiw ’18; and a piece choreographed by visiting lecturer Nic Ceynowa.

 A temple dancer in India wearing flowers and lots of jewelry.

Article

Love and the Goddess

This is an episode from the “What Makes Us Human?” podcast's third season, "What Do We Know about Love?" from Cornell University’s College of Arts & Sciences, showcasing the newest thinking from across the disciplines about the relationship between humans and love. Featuring audio essays written and recorded by Cornell faculty, the series releases a new episode each Tuesday through the fall semester.

 A temple dancer in India wearing flowers and lots of jewelry.

Article

Podcast examines love and obligation

“Love and the Goddess” a new episode of the “What Makes Us Human” podcast series, explores marriage between girls and a goddess in South India.
 Roman columns still standing in an ancient ruin

Article

New podcast offers leadership lessons from ancient history

A new podcast, Antiquitas: Leaders and Legends of the Ancient World, combines story-telling and scholarship to bring to life the ancient world’s most engaging personalities, real and mythical. The first season, “Gods of War,” contains eight episodes chronicling war stories of ancient Greece and Rome, from Achilles and Helen to Julius Caesar.

 Duke and ladies in a garden (Miniature) The duke and companions entertaining ladies in a garden. From Le Duc des vrais amants.

Article

New podcast examines courtly love

This episode of the “What Makes Us Human” podcast series explains how the invention of courtly love helped prevent warfare in medieval Europe.
 Maryame El Moutamid, research associate in the Cornell Center for Astrophysics and Planetary Science

Article

Odd bodies, rapid spins keep cosmic rings close

… Chariklo and Haumea were the first small objects known to have rings, and we think that rings throughout the solar … topographic anomaly on the object, such as a mountain, may play a similar gravitational role as a “moon” to hold the rings together. In addition to gravity, rapidly …
 Play logo

Article

Play by Cornell faculty performed in London

… 6597 … To mark the 100th anniversary of some women in the United Kingdom gaining the right to vote, the National Theatre London showcased “Magda, Jo, Isabella,” a play co-written by Lyrae Van Clief-Stefanon , associate …
 Detail of the visual depiction of the Arecibo message

Article

Google celebrates Arecibo message to extraterrestrials

Image: This is the Arecibo message with color added to highlight its separate parts. The actual binary transmission carried no color information. Credit: Arne Nordmann

Today’s Google doodle celebrates the 44th anniversary of humankind’s first intentional radio message to extraterrestrials, via the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico, which was then managed by Cornell.

 Indonesian Mosque

Article

With Cornell grants, faculty launch social sciences research

How will the rise in sea levels due to climate change affect the fiscal health of U.S. cities? Can virtual reality help architects “try out” a building’s design before construction has even started? How do social processes affect artificial intelligence in high-stakes areas such as sentencing for criminals and job applications? These are a few of the questions Cornell’s social science faculty are exploring this fall, thanks to funding from the Institute for the Social Sciences (ISS). The ISS’s Fall 2018 Small Grant Awards are designed to support faculty as they develop new research and seek external funding.
 Duke and ladies in a garden (Miniature) The duke and companions entertaining ladies in a garden. From Le Duc des vrais amants.

Article

Courtly Love

This is an episode from the “What Makes Us Human?” podcast's third season, "What Do We Know about Love?" from Cornell University’s College of Arts & Sciences, showcasing the newest thinking from across the disciplines about the relationship between humans and love. Featuring audio essays written and recorded by Cornell faculty, the series releases a new episode each Tuesday through the fall semester.

 Jonah Goldberg

Article

Jonah Goldberg: on populism and identity politics

Is the fabric of our civilization being torn by identity politics, nationalism and populism? Are Americans ignoring character and competence in an “us vs. them” political landscape? Political analyst Jonah Goldberg examined divisiveness in U.S. politics and discuss possible solutions in his talk, “Suicide of the West” Thursday, Nov. 29, at 5:15 p.m. in Klarman Hall’s Rhodes-Rawlings Auditorium. His lecture was free and open to the public.
 A fraternity brother in a suit standing in the living room. Credit/Copyright: Andrew Moisey

Article

Art book reveals inner world of ‘The American Fraternity’

The black, faux-leather book cover declares “The American Fraternity,” and nothing else. The title page reads only “Ritual of Initiation.”
 Organizer Wendy Wolford, vice provost for international affairs

Article

Cornell faculty, leadership begin to tackle grand challenges

… York’s land-grant university, Cornell is uniquely suited to tackle “grand challenges” like the ones discussed at the Nov. 8-9 Global Grand Challenges Symposium, according to Wendy Wolford, Cornell vice provost for international … Law School, said migration is an issue where law will play a major role, and solutions will require international …
 A cuneiform tablet with Sumerian writing on it

Article

How to Text like a Sumerian

“Buffalo,” said Jonathan Tenney eight times in a row to the crowded room in White Hall.
 Richard Johnson speaking

Article

Johnson details computational art history techniques

Professor C. Richard Johnson discussed the techniques he innovated using X-rays and algorithms to analyze works of art in his Nov. 9 talk at the A.D. White House, “Studying Vermeer’s Canvases and Rembrandt’s Papers: Two Examples of Computational Art History.”
 Headshot of Vanessa Rodriguez '18

Article

A&S student presents research at Emerging Scholars conference

Vanessa Navarro Rodriguez '19 works to understand why sexual exploitation happens during U.N. peacekeeping missions.

Article

What’s it like to have Wynton Marsalis drop by your music class?

The video featuring A.D. White Professor-at-Large Wynton Marsalis and students in the College of Arts & Sciences was featured by Jazz at Lincoln Center on its social media pages.
 Students at research reception

Article

Event connects Arts & Sciences scholars across the college

Students included College Scholars, Presidential Research Scholars, Tanner Dean’s Scholars, McNair Scholars and Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellows.
 The first cohort of W.E. Cornell

Article

22 student entrepreneurs join W.E. Cornell

The group addresses the underrepresentation of women entrepreneurs in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) fields.
 Fingers holding a photo of an elderly couple

Article

Podcast examines the psychobiology of love

“Love Science” a new episode of the “What Makes Us Human” podcast series, explores the behavioral, psychological, and neural components of love -- and its loss.
 Deblina Datta

Article

Alumna fights to eradicate polio

Deblina Datta '90 visited campus Oct. 19 for a career conversation hosted by the Arts & Sciences Career Development Center.
 Fingers holding a photo of an elderly couple

Article

Love Science

This is an episode from the “What Makes Us Human?” podcast's third season, "What Do We Know about Love?" from Cornell University’s College of Arts & Sciences, showcasing the newest thinking from across the disciplines about the relationship between humans and love. Featuring audio essays written and recorded by Cornell faculty, the series releases a new episode each Tuesday through the fall semester.

 atacama desert rainbow

Article

For arid, Mars-like Peruvian desert, rain brings death

When rains fell on the arid Atacama Desert, it was reasonable to expect floral blooms to follow. Instead, the water brought death.

An international team of planetary astrobiologists has found that after encountering never-before-seen rainfall three years ago at the arid core of Peru’s Atacama Desert, the heavy precipitation wiped out most of the microbes that had lived there.

 Carl Sagan

Article

‘Lost’ lecture by Carl Sagan released in honor of his birthday

Cornell’s Carl Sagan Institute honored Sagan's birthday by releasing a lecture he gave in 1994, “The Age of Exploration.”
 Sharice Davids

Article

Five alumni to serve in the 116th Congress

Sharice Davids J.D. '10 is one of the first two Native American women elected and A&S grad Kurt Schrader ’73 was re-elected to a sixth term in Oregon.
 Detail from illustration. First Colored Senator and Representatives in the 41st and 42nd Congress of the United States.

Article

Defining 'the people,' expanding the vote

It’s a little-known fact of U.S. history that in the early 1800s, while most African-Americans were enslaved, freed black men in some states had the right to vote.
 Women in Munnar, India, working in the field. Photo by Ian Wagg on Unsplash

Article

Experts on gender and plant breeding at Nov. 10 symposium

Experts in gender and research on plant breeding tools will gather at Cornell Nov. 10 to address that topic in public talks, 9:30 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. in B75 Warren Hall. RSVP here.
 McGraw clock tower colored green

Article

Cornell honors veterans, celebrates Armistice centennial

A century ago, Cornell provided 4,598 commissioned officers to fight in World War I – more than any other institution, including West Point.
 Nilay Yapici

Article

Neuroscientist receives grant for aging research

Nilay Yapici, assistant professor of neurobiology and behavior, has received a 2018 Glenn Foundation for Medical Research and AFAR Research Grants for Junior Faculty from the American Federation for Aging Research (AFAR). The grant provides an early career investigator with up to $100,000 for one to two years to support research focused on aging processes and age-related diseases.

 Bonobo amidst jungle leaves

Article

Forum to examine sustainability and nonhuman primates

Humans share 98.8 percent of their DNA – as well as tool use and systems of communication – with bonobos and chimpanzees. Yet human activity threatens these “next of kin” great apes with extinction. In “Apes and Sustainability,” a forum on Nov. 15, activists, scholars, scientists and humanists will explore new perspectives on preserving nonhuman great apes in sustainable ways. The event will be held in the A.D. White House’s Guerlac Room 4:30-6:30 p.m., followed by a reception.

 Panel of faculty members

Article

Carrying out Ezra Cornell’s vision in teaching, research, practices

Ezra Cornell’s promise of 150 years ago and Andrew Dickson White’s vision remains a work in progress.
 Headshot of Andrew Wang '19

Article

A&S student combines interests in CS, social systems to study teams

Andrew Wang '19 found that having a confident teammate can do more to boost a person’s self-confidence than having a smart and skillful teammate.
 trump

Article

Why Trump’s immigration rhetoric may not help Republicans at the polls

Peter Enns, associate professor of government and executive director of the Roper Center and Jonathon Schuldt, associate professor of communication and a faculty affiliate at the Roper Center, studied whether Trump's anti-immigrant rhetoric would help or hurt Republicans going into today's elections and report

 Dean Ray Jayawardhana

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A&S dean describes ‘extraordinary age of discovery’

Drawing a picture of wonder with words, images and animations, Dean Jayawardhana shared his enthusiasm for astronomy exploration as keynote at this year's Trustee-Council Annual Meeting.
 Student Headshots

Article

A&S students named United Nations Millennium Fellows

Students will work to advance the eight United Nations Millennium Development Goals, improving the lives of the world’s poorest people.
 fruit fly

Article

Driven by evolving genes, germline stem cells studied

Variation is the spice of life, especially on the genetic level. Any two humans, for example, differ on average by 20 million nucleotides out of a total of 3 billion. “There’s tremendous interest in understanding what those differences do,” says Charles F.

 nymph

Article

Study reveals why tropical mountains are so biodiverse

Tropical mountain species are especially vulnerable to rapid climate change, Cornell researchers find.
 Volunteers at the Ithaca Children's Garden, pushing wheelbarrows

Article

Podcast explores love of place

“Topophilia,” a new episode of the “What Makes Us Human” podcast series, examines what motivates people to care for Earth’s creatures and its places.
 Goldwin Smith Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Kelly Zamudio

Article

Eight faculty honored with Weiss teaching awards

Cornell has recognized eight faculty members for excellence in their teaching of undergraduate students and contributions to undergraduate education.

 Professor Joseph R. Fetcho

Article

Cornell Neurotech Symposium explores brain research

Three neuroscientists discussed how birds learn to sing, an RNA editing approach to potentially cure the autism spectrum disorder Rett Syndrome, and the latest progress in functional imaging of human brains at the third annual Cornell Neurotech Mong Family Foundation Symposium, Sept. 27 in the Biotechnology Building.

 Mukoma Wa Ngugi

Article

The non-confrontational question that helps men become feminists

The work of Mukoma Wa Ngugi, poet and associate professor of English, is featured in this Quartz article.

 Darshna Angiol

Article

Physics, fundamental to neurobiology

Because Itai Cohen’s lab studies matter in motion—colloidal particles, fly neurons, movement of individuals at a concert—Darshna Anigol was thrilled.
 Jair Bolsonaro, Brazil's new president

Article

Why is democracy faltering?

Kaushik Basu, a professor of economics, former chief economist of the World Bank and non resident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution wrote an opinion piece for news outlet Mail & Guardian discussing the role that digitalization of economics play in our societies following the recent election of Jair Bolsonaro as Brazil's newest president. Basu claims that feelings of vulnerableness, anger, and anxiety grow out of a surging inequality of wealth caused by technology's unprecedented boom.
 Winnie Ho and Emme Runge

Article

A&S students named Engaged Ambassadors

Ambassadors support students working on community projects, coordinate outreach efforts and mentor students learning about leadership.