The Chronicle Review By Marc Parry A case study of what happens when research collides with public memory. |
Research In recent years, scholarship on the history of slavery has leapt beyond academe to force a societal reckoning. This article is one in an occasional series on fresh questions scholars are asking as America confronts its history of human bondage. |
Students By Chris Quintana Members of the student organization, long a minority group in higher education, may continue to serve as gleeful instigators on campuses. And if they don’t, someone else might take up the mantle. |
The Ticker A tweet by the sociologist â linking the storm to Texansâ having voted Republican â does not represent the views of the university, it said. |
Academic Freedom By Chris Quintana This year has seen a rash of free-speech controversies involving faculty members. In many cases, their college or university criticized them. The Chronicle has been tracking such incidents. Here are two new entries. |
The Chronicle Review By Zachary Loeb Thanks to statues, we can confidently say that the two overarching themes of history are people standing in place and people riding on horses. |
Lingua Franca Bill Germano ponders the spelling of âShakespearâ on the University of Southern Californiaâs new statue. |
Vitae By Melanie Nelson How to use “dependency analysis” to foresee potential problems and delays. |