Noted

A Note on Three Body by Fred Lee

Professor Fred Lee (Political Science and Asian & Asian American Studies), recommends Three Body—the Tencent TV adaption of the Liu Cixin novel The Three Body Problem.

Transcript

Fred Lee received his Ph.D. in political science from the University of California, Los Angeles and his B.A. in political science from the University of California, Berkeley. He is jointly appointed between Political Science and Asian/Asian American Studies, and holds affiliations with Africana Studies, American Studies, and Philosophy. He works across the fields of contemporary political theory, U.S. political development, Asian/Asian American cultural studies, and comparative ethnic studies.


An image of an audio waveform, half red, half white, with a blue progress bar between the two halves. Text in the bottom corner reads "noted".In each installment of Noted, members of the UConn community share voice notes about something they have taken particular note of recently. Notes can be recommendations, reviews, observations, tips, or commentary. Have you seen a movie recently you can’t stop thinking about? Did you come across a fascinating document while conducting research? Have some new thought about the place of the Humanities in the academy or in society? Want to share a note about it? Let us know!

A Note on Funding for Higher Education by Andy Horowitz

Professor Andy Horowitz (History), shares an op-ed he wrote for the Hearst newspapers in Connecticut about challenges facing universities and the importance of the humanities.

Transcript

Andy Horowitz is an Associate Professor of History and also serves as the Connecticut State Historian. Broadly, his work is meant to help people think through problems that are often imagined to be without precedent. A scholar of the modern United States, his research focuses on disasters and the questions they give rise to about race, class, community, trauma, inequality, the welfare state, extractive industry, metropolitan development, and environmental change.


An image of an audio waveform, half red, half white, with a blue progress bar between the two halves. Text in the bottom corner reads "noted".In each installment of Noted, members of the UConn community share voice notes about something they have taken particular note of recently. Notes can be recommendations, reviews, observations, tips, or commentary. Have you seen a movie recently you can’t stop thinking about? Did you come across a fascinating document while conducting research? Have some new thought about the place of the Humanities in the academy or in society? Want to share a note about it? Let us know!