
USC Poet Anna Journey Explores Her Darker Side
USC poet Anna Journey is unafraid to explore the quirky, creepy, scary and plain old peculiar.
USC poet Anna Journey is unafraid to explore the quirky, creepy, scary and plain old peculiar.
The professor emeritus appreciated intellectual engagement and emphasized the importance of students finding their own critical voice.
Half the world’s languages could disappear in a few decades, and USC Dornsife’s Tok Thompson is helping students figure out why — and what might be lost.
The professor of history and accounting and USC President C. L. Max Nikias present Soll’s book to the prime minister of Greece.
USC researcher examines the British Empire’s bureaucracy through American and Indian colonial-era archives.
The poet, philosopher and scholar will lead conversations with students on artistic expression.
What gave the Trojans a leg up in the Classics Olympia competition? Credit the Classics Department’s intimacy — especially small class sizes and student-faculty camaraderie.
USC medical librarian leads a lively discussion on a novel topic: What exactly is a ‘good death’?
USC scholar studies the ideal of gender roles within Buddhism, focusing on the women and religious texts of fifth-century China.
USC Dornsife’s Sarah Portnoy teaches the Spanish language by tracing the culinary history of L.A.’s Grand Central Market.
The leader of USC’s Career Pathways advises students to start early, making mixers, mentorship and elevator pitches part of their job strategy.
A book filled with hilarious and heartbreaking cartoons was Roz Chast’s way of processing what she learned about the end of life.
Anna Journey takes a walk on the dark side in poems and essays about graveyards, infidelities and tattoos.
From traveling abroad to digging through treasures, USC undergraduates go beyond the book to interpret history.
Robert Suzuki calls his philosophy degree ‘the perfect tool’ in his career as co-owner of the successful restaurant chain Eureka!
International relations faculty map out a possible shape for U.S. relations with Asia, the Middle East, Latin America and Russia under the new president.
The masterful scholar of Chinese history developed East Asian studies at USC.
The accomplished USC author will consult with the organization and act as an ambassador of poetry in the world at large.
Undergrads find inspiration by talking to best-selling writers in a contemporary prose class.
The USC Dornsife Economics Department launches the USC Economics Review to spotlight students’ research.
USC experts in international relations, history and American studies and ethnicity find that some lessons stemming from the ‘Day of Infamy’ still apply.
Trojan helps local high school students understand global issues, building her own skill set in the process.
Alumna Marie Lu left her academic pursuit of law and medicine to focus on gaming and writing.
USC researchers look the key role of humor — from stand-up routines to social media to cartoons — in the political process.