Together, We Explore
In a 2021 monthly series, we share stories that reflect our curiosity, ability to adapt, engagement with the community, and research and creative expertise. This month, we are focusing on our curiosity.
In a 2021 monthly series, we share stories that reflect our curiosity, ability to adapt, engagement with the community, and research and creative expertise. This month, we are focusing on our curiosity.
The focus of our majors in liberal arts – culture, politics, communications, economics, and the like – intertwine with health challenges worldwide that range from pandemics to affordable housing, air quality to spiritual health.
Learn more about how the liberal arts approach the topic of health in the Winter 2020/Spring 2021 issue of the College of Liberal Arts Magazine.
In the Winter 2019/Spring 2020 issue of the Liberal Arts Magazine, we apply the lenses of the liberal arts to place and space. Colorado State University and the Clark Building are both spaces located in Fort Collins, along the Front Range, in the Mountain West. But they are also places — made meaningful by the people attached to them and the memories created within, through, and because of them.
Get a virtual background that you can upload to Zoom or other video conferencing tool to show your Ram pride while working or studying remotely.
Professor Emeritus David Freeman taught at CSU from 1967 to 2005. Specializing in social development, social dimensions of technology, and environmental policy assessment and social choice, Freeman’s notable memories include teaching during the Vietnam war.
Professor Emerita Mary Crow was a professor in the Department of English from 1964 to 2003. Her specialty was in poetry, of which she wrote several books thanks to the research support she received from the College of Liberal Arts.
Professor Emeritus David McComb from the Department of History pens a letter to the Clark Building, reflecting on the years since they both arrived on campus in 1969.
Professor Emerita Sue Ellen Markey Charlton taught in the Department of Political Science from 1967 to 2010. She specialized in international relations, comparative politics, and gender studies and now reflects on some of her memories from her time at CSU.
In the Spring 2019 issue of the Liberal Arts Magazine, we approach the topic of technology through our disciplines. The specific skills and tools unique to the liberal arts can provide understanding and a way to navigate the ways technology does (or doesn’t) advance the human experience.
In the Winter 2018 issue of the Liberal Arts Magazine, we apply the lenses of the liberal arts to water. How we understand water and our relationship to it provides us insight into politics, economics, art, ourselves, and life itself.