an image of a small orange gameboy sitting next to a red robot

Why Play Games? A History and a (Self-)Justification

This post was written by Brian Croxall, a Humanities Center faculty fellow.    This semester and with the support of the College of Humanities, my colleague Michael Call and I launched a new initiative: the game of the week. Every week, one video game will be available to play in the Humanities Learning Commons (1141 …

an image of a door is open in a run down building

Acquainted with Death

This post was written by Kathryn Charles, the current Humanities Center Intern.    My uncle died the week before my wedding. It was one of my first close encounters with death, and so my grief, although real, was also strange and unexpected. In the days after his death, I found myself spontaneously weeping over cheese …

an image of a tree with apples growing on it

The Garden of Celestial Delights

This post was written by Sara Phenix, a Humanities Center faculty fellow.    The scriptures are a veritable catalog of botanical wonders, starting, of course, with the Garden of Eden and its myriad plant species. We know from the Book of Moses that Adam and Eve’s expulsion from the vegetal paradise initiated them into the …

an image of a sheep with a lot of wool on it ' s face

Facing the Lamb

This post was written by Rex P. Nielson, BYU Humanities Center Director.    Few art restoration projects have commanded headlines like those that swirled after the second-phased unveiling of the Ghent Altarpiece in 2020. Following a nearly ten-year and multi-million-dollar process utilizing the advanced conservation techniques of the Royal Institute for Cultural Heritage (KIK-IRPA, Brussels), …

an image of a field with purple flowers and a lake in the background

“What does that do exactly?”: On Granular Humanities

This post was written by Gabbie Schwartz, a Humanities Center student fellow and the BYU Humanities Center Intern.    It was 4:30 p.m., and I was getting dinner with a friend at the Olive Garden—which is how all great stories start. Excitedly, my friend told me about her senior capstone, an electrical engineering project in …

an image of a water drop in a glass with a purple background

All Shades of Purple

This post was written by Rebekah James, winner of the 2024 Humanities Center Essay Contest.   The British poet William Wordsworth saw the death of his father in the rain. He wrote, I do not doubt That in this later time when storm and rain Beat on my roof at midnight, or by day When …

an image of a busy intersection with people walking and cars

Crossing the Threshold

This post was written by Ansley Morris, a Humanities Center student fellow.   When I was 18 years-old, there was one word that stopped me from declaring myself an English major: prose. Not writing it, not reading it, but the very word itself. Prose. Those five letters were my roadblock, spelling out every one of …

an image of a person standing on a brick walkway with arrows drawn on it

Changes, Transitions, Decisions

This post was written by Anna-Lisa Halling, a Humanities Center faculty fellow.   I am currently preparing to direct a study abroad program in Portugal, and my children happen to have a lot of opinions about this new adventure. My daughter declared that she prefers Madrid because Lisbon has “too many hills,” a fact with …

an image of a person is using a hammer to make a piece of metal

The Fire in the Forge: How Trials Help Us Grow

This post was written by Luke Beckstrand, a Humanities Center student fellow.   One of the most challenging and age-old questions in the world strikes us all close to home: “Why do bad things happen to good people?” It’s easy to wonder, if we’ve tried our best to live a good life and spread only …