Menu
Associate professor of computer science and linguistics Christopher Manning comments.
Why Big Tobacco harassed history professor Robert Proctor for conducting research on the tobacco industry.
The dance company of artist in resident Robert Moses performs a new piece.
Gregory Freidin, professor of Slavic languages and literatures reviews "Kamennyi Most."
Review of "The Possessed: Adventures with Russian Books and the people who read them" by Elif Batuman, lecturer of interdisciplinary studies in humanities.
NPR, February 23, 2010
The New York Times, February 23, 2010
English Ph.D graduate Paul Joel Freeman publishes book that helps foreign students learn English as a second language.
Professor of History Thomas Mullaney comments on the political role of China's multi-ethnic theme parks.
Stanford Alumna Heidi W. Durrow publishes her debut novel.
Director of Iranian studies Abbas Milani comments on a new generation.
Guest blogs by Stanford lecturer Elif Batuman.
Director of Archaeology Center Ian Hodder comments on a temple complex in Turkey that predates the pyramids.
Works in the exhibit were discovered in a storage room by Cantor curator Xiaoneng Yang.
"Tracng the Past, Drawing the Future," will exhibit at Cantor Arts Center, and the Pan-Asian Music Festival will be held at Stanford.
The four ink painters survived persecution, insult and neglect to redefine and revivify an ancient art form.
Professor Dan Edelstein discusses the importance of foreign language literature and mentions a new major launched by the English department.
Professor of Slavic Studies Gregory Freidin explores Isaac Babel's world of violence and irony.
The New York Times reviews humanities lecturer Elif Batuman's The Possessed.
NY Magazine reviews books by English professor Terry Castle and interdisciplinary humanities lecturer Elif Batuman.
LA Times discusses the first book of essays by Stanford lecturer Elif Batuman.
History professor Joel Beinin writse about the expansion in East Jerusalem.
Professor of Chinese literature and culture Ban Wang comments on the upsurge of interest on the Internet in Mao's thinking.
Abbas Milani, director of Iranian studies at Stanford, comments on why the movement in Iran is not just another revolution.
An editorial by Elif Batuman, lecturer of interdisciplinary studies in humanities.
Stanford's Pan-Annual Music Festival has a particularly diverse, impressive and youthful lineup this year.
According to a national study, Stanford was among the universities with the largest increase in Israel-focused courses since 2006.
Stanford Iranian studies program director Abbas Milani comments.
Assistant professor in linguistics Alexandra D'Arcy writes a column.
Google agreement expands digital scanning of millions of Stanford library books.
Stanford sophomore, named Ishan, contributes to essay discussion on whether J.D. Salinger's "Catcher in the Rye" resonates with teenagers today.
French Professor Jean-Marie Apostolidès finds link between blood and ink in Ted Kaczynski's "Manifesto"
History professor Clayborne Carson describes the sit-ins of the civil rights movement.
The 18th century Haitian struggle for independence plays an important role in history.
Stanford professor emeritus of history David Kennedy discusses a model for Obama's foreign policy.