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Michel de Montaigne and Francois Rabelais would get dinner invites from the historian whose work has addressed the history of Britain, the power of art, revolutionary politics and more.
Columbia researchers suggest radiation that lights the densest objects in our universe is powered by the interplay of turbulence and reconnection of super-strong magnetic fields.
Magdalena Baczewska, director of Columbia’s Music Performance Program, performs chamber music with the Cassatt String Quartet.
Her students constantly inspire her, as does living and working in New York.
Why do we tap our feet or dance in time to the beat?
A partner at Diller Scofidio + Renfro discusses her firm’s biggest projects of 2019.
Based on her years in the music industry, Regan Sommer McCoy spent much of her time at Columbia combing through archives and learning programming language so she could build a mixtape database.
Robert Shapiro, a professor and former chair of the Department of Political Science, frames Joe Biden's presidential path to the 2020 election.
At a recent event at The Forum, award-winning British architect Sir David Adjaye discussed making cities more inclusive and livable by recasting art and architecture for the future and the past.
An expanded poverty tracking survey will now look at early childhood poverty and the experiences of Asian-American New Yorkers.
The University asks students to collaborate on building a roadmap for climate response and a more sustainable future.
Professor Anne Nelson reveals how the right-wing media have proliferated in the U.S. and infiltrated American voters in her new book Shadow Network: Media, Money, and the Secret Hub of the Radical Right.
For a half century, Kenneth T. Jackson, Jacques Barzun Professor of History and the Social Sciences at Columbia, has been a beloved teacher, public historian and author renowned for his encyclopedic knowledge of New York City.
Were you paying attention to the latest developments across Columbia this week? Test your knowledge. Take the quiz.
You may know your New York City history, but few can beat Professor Ken Jackson, who literally wrote the book.