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  • of bugs in a book. Light glistens on the gold leaf, dancing around the illuminations with every slight pivot. The sparkling accents throughout the book represent the presence of the divine. Women and marginalized people can see their faces in the artwork. Science, anthropology, history, multiple faiths and more stand on equal ground, from the subtle use of DNA strands in the illuminations to the recurring use of Hebrew and Arabic text throughout the book. For the illumination “Genealogy of Jesus

  • . Beyond these interpersonal relationships, which I cherish to this day and intend to maintain for years to come, I also gained knowledge and skills through my coursework that have proven useful to me in later academic endeavors. While I was in Norway, I conducted an independent field research project on Norwegian approaches to development aid, which involved personal interviews with several prominent scholars and practitioners. Now, in my graduate studies in the anthropology and sociology of

  • philosophy of Emmanuel Levinas and postmodern anthropology. She is a part-time lecturer at the Institute of Polish Culture at the University of Warsaw. She was a Fulbright fellow at Penn State University. Before that, she wrote an M.A. thesis on blood libel in Europe and Poland. She previously co-operated with the Museum of the History of Polish Jews on The Polish Righteous program and worked as Forum for Dialogue’s educator. Forum for Dialogue is the largest and oldest Polish non-governmental

  • in which different members of society interact with one another. In particular, we will examine how work has been theorized since the Industrial Revolution, from Karl Marx and German sociologist max Weber to recent philosophy, sociology, and anthropology. Then, we will explore how different art forms have responded to these, many time oppressive, working conditions as well as imagined more just alternatives. We will look at a variety of literary texts, painting, photography, and film from Britain

  • feminist, process and Lutheran theologies and has focused on Christology, theological anthropology, the doctrine of God, and science and religion (including economics, geoengineering and ecology). As a contributor and editor, she published Cross Examinations: Readings on the Meaning of the Cross Today (Fortress, 2006) and contributed to Transformative Lutheran Theologies (Fortress, 2010) and Lutherrenaissance: Past and Present (Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2015) along with several other journals and books

  • investigation centers around museums as rhetorical spaces that contribute to the construction of collective memory, emphasizing narratives of survival, resilience, and identity for Holocaust survivors living in Uruguay and Argentina. Venice JakowchukA Comparative Stylistic Analysis of Calixtlahuaca Projectile Points Faculty Mentor: Bradford Andrews, Anthropology This project analyzes projectile points found in Calixtlahuaca, central Mexico (1130 – 1530 AD). Through visual and comparative analysis the

  • un art. Elle es une science pure.”  Professor Emeritus of French Mark Jensen Such a formulation may strike us as naïve, but modern historiography has been marked by attempts to import into history the prestige of this or that field of scientific or pseudo-scientific endeavor. Sociology, economics, psychoanalysis, anthropology and linguistics are only some of the disciplines that have been exploited in this way. (The philosophical justification for Pacific Lutheran University’s assignment of the

  • . Marit A. Trelstad, PLU Chair of Lutheran Studies and Professor of Constructive and Lutheran Theologies at PLU Bio:  Dr. Marit Trelstad is Professor of Constructive and Lutheran Theology at Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, Washington. Her scholarly work combines feminist, process and Lutheran theologies and has focused on Christology, theological anthropology, the doctrine of God, and science and religion (including economics, geoengineering and ecology). As a contributor and editor, she

  • wider worlds of business, economics, and technology. For your program, Marc, there were faculty from History, Sociology, Economics, and Anthropology involved!” Michael: “Matt, can you tell readers how you got started with your business history project?” Matt: “Sure—It began with my shared interests in History and Economics. In this case, you were my faculty adviser, Dr. Halvorson, so when you described your current research on the early history of personal computing, I was intrigued. The topic that

  • Seattle offices of Adobe. PLU CSIStudents in a forensic anthropology class investigate a faux crime scene. FIRST HOME WINNew football coach Brant McAdams pumps the air after Lutes achieve victory over the Claremont-Mudd-Scripps team. MUSICAL INTERLUDEMembers of the PLU Jazz Ensemble hang loose as they prepare for a group photo with new director of jazz studies Cassio Vianna, left. Celebrating Winter GraduatesDenis Julio and her family gather with others for a reception. KALEIDOSCOPE EYESNursing