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Literature and medicine
Dag Woubeshet (right) speaks with student in a classroom who is giving the thumbs up.

Dagmawi Woubshet (right), Edmund J. and Louise W. Kahn Endowed Term Associate Professor of English, says “we try to teach our students how to think critically and historically, but also with fidelity to the art object.”

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Literature and medicine

The Penn Arts & Sciences course Literature and Medicine begins with Apollo and the Hippocratic Oath and extends through the 21st century with poetry, novels, videography, historical texts, and guest lecturers from the Perelman School of Medicine and beyond.

Kristina Linnea García

2 min. read

Awards and accolades for Penn faculty
An archway on Penn’s campus in the snow.

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Awards and accolades for Penn faculty

A roundup of the latest appointments and awards for various faculty members in the Graduate School of Education, the School of Arts & Sciences, and the School of Engineering and Applied Science.

Penn Today Staff

2 min. read

The professor who moonlights as a songwriter
Album cover for My Mother In Love's “The Summer Sessions”

Professor Girlfriend’s debut album marks a shift from Anna Weesner’s prior work, situating her as part of a collaborative trio rather than as a composer.

(Image: Courtesy of Anna Weesner)

The professor who moonlights as a songwriter

The musical trio Professor Girlfriend, which includes Anna Weesner, Dr. Robert Weiss Professor of Music in Penn's School of Arts & Sciences, bends genre and challenges boundaries with a new album, “My Mother In Love: The Summer Sessions.”

From Omnia

2 min. read

New model could help police departments reduce excessive force incidents

New model could help police departments reduce excessive force incidents

Criminology professor Greg Ridgeway has developed a model that estimates an officer’s likelihood of using a higher level of force than peers in similar situations—an improvement on existing early-intervention systems that don’t account for differences in time and location.

3 min. read

Connecting Latin American fiction through infrastructure and transit
Left: Valeria Seminario; right: An old illustrated map of the Americas.

Sixth-year Spanish & Portuguese Ph.D. student Valeria Seminario.

(Image: Courtesy of Omnia)

Connecting Latin American fiction through infrastructure and transit

Penn Arts & Sciences Ph.D. student Valeria Seminario’s dissertation explores themes of transportation and infrastructure in 19th- and early 20th-century Latin American fiction.

Marilyn Perkins

2 min. read

A balancing act with Carly Oniki
Carly Oniki leans against a balance beam in the gymnastics training center.

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A balancing act with Carly Oniki

The fourth-year gymnast discusses the multiyear success of the gymnastics team, her love of the sport, her favorite place on campus, some off-the-mat activities, and why Penn was her dream school.

5 min. read

Can aging be treated at the cellular level?
A microscope with a slide.

Image: Wladimir Bulgar via Getty Images

Can aging be treated at the cellular level?

Penn researchers Shelley Berger and Esra Sahingur explain senescence, the process of cellular aging, and discuss the complexities of developing anti-aging therapies that target these cells.

4 min. read

Examining the forces shaping world heritage 

Examining the forces shaping world heritage 

Lynn Meskell looks at the politics of archaeology and world heritage to understand why we conserve certain places and who benefits from the work.