Two hands in dim light crafting a food of some kind - perhaps a wonton

Wǎnān

This poem was written by Marie Hua, winner of the 2026 Artistic Narrative section in the 2026 Humanities Center Tell Your Story Contest.   Tonight, my Nǎinai makes wontons: ground pork bok choy xiāmǐ  thumbs up! chop to mix, hǎo hǎo hǎo… We wrap them like small talk; like how on the way to buy …

A stream of light emerging through a window

Angle of Incidence

This essay was written by Paige Winegar Fetzer, winner of the Creative Nonfiction section of the 2026 Humanities Center Tell Your Story Contest.   Most of what I know about God has arrived sideways—caught like dust motes illuminated in a warm slant of light. The summer before I started graduate school, the sun slipped through …

a blurry group of people seated in a theatre, taken from behind

On “Goodness” and Moral Ambiguity

This essay was written by Sawyer Wood, BYU Humanities Center intern and student fellow. A few months ago, Wicked: For Good was released in theaters. As the concluding adaptation of one of Broadway’s longest-running musicals, it stood among the year’s most anticipated films, and seemed to be something the whole world was talking about. When …

A black and white image of a person in a button-up shirt holding a mirror up so that their face cannot be seen, reflecting instead a part of the sky

Self-Ignorance, Stories, and Aspirational Agency

This essay was written by Justin F. White, a BYU Humanities Center faculty fellow. In “A Theory of Jerks,” Eric Schwitzgebel describes the jerk as someone who “culpably fails to appreciate the perspectives of others around him, treating them as tools to be manipulated or fools to be dealt with rather than as moral and …

A set of stairs in a museum with statues on either side and one statue at the top, all life-sized

On Deserve

This essay was written by Aiden Jones, a BYU Humanities Center student fellow. I don’t know that I’ve ever been able to use words to communicate as well as Helen Burns, whose “soul sat on her lips, and language flowed” as she spoke to her friend Jane Eyre. [1] Today, language, like almost everything else …

a brown envelope with a blank piece of white paper and a green plant

Letters to Rilke

This essay was written by Julia Morgan, a BYU Humanities Center student fellow.   Dear Rilke,         I know you were born in 1875, and that you didn’t write Letters to a Young Poet to me. But I’m in need of some counsel, and, as I am a Young Poet as well, …

Annual Symposium: “Touch: Sensation, Embodiment, Relation”

Call for Papers BYU Humanities Center Annual Symposium, Fall 2026 “Touch: Sensation, Embodiment, Relation” The sensation of touch is produced by one of the most complex systems in the human body. Current neuroscience research, for example, estimates that the human hand alone contains roughly 17,000 mechanoreceptors—bundles of cells, nerves, and sensory units—that relay myriad stimuli …

A pile of scrabble tiles, some displaying letters

Every Nation, and Kindred, and Tongue, and People

This essay was written by Chris Rogers, a BYU Humanities Center faculty fellow. I think, write, and teach about language diversity a lot. In my classes students are asked to analyze the similarities and differences between languages from all over the world, how they have independently developed, and what they uniquely represent for the people …

A tempest at sea

No More, God

This essay was written by George Dibble, a BYU Humanities Center student fellow. Alone in my room, I listened to a neuroscientist (Caroline Leaf) talk about the 21st century’s rise in preventable deaths. She talked about surging anxiety, depression rates, and especially of my generation (Gen Z). Gallup reports that 47.8 million Americans are diagnosed …

Drops of rain falling into water

A Skeptic’s Guide to Truth

This essay was written by Porter Kindall, a BYU Humanities Center student fellow.   “I want so badly to believe that there is truth, that love is real” – Ben Gibbard  In the landscape of indie rock, few albums have achieved the cult status of The Postal Service’s Give Up. Released in 2003, the album charts the …