Pines Press, a first-of-its-kind collaboration, was conceived by WSU Press Editor-in-Chief Linda Bathgate and Amanda Clark, Whitworth University’s dean of the library and special programs.
The 41st annual WSU fashion show takes place this Friday in Pullman and celebrates the work of nearly 30 students who have spent years working on their designs.
Megan Asaka, history faculty from the University of California, Riverside, will present: “The Dividing Line: Race and Segregation in Early Seattle” at 4:30 p.m. Thursday, April 4, in Todd 276.
Learn about the importance of intergenerational knowledge in Indigenous artwork during a series of events at the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art and online Feb. 22–24.
WSU’s Xiuyu Wang and Weiguo Cao discuss traditional celebrations of the Lunar New Year in China as well as the cultural significance of the Year of the Dragon and the Chinese zodiac.
The book explores the untold story of food and inequality in America. Incoming first-year students and faculty planning to use the book in their courses will receive a free copy.
“Montana Modernists” focuses on the artists who redefined the art of the Western United States, shedding the romanticism of the generation that came before them.
Washington State Magazine explores the complicated ties that continue to reverberate between the Pacific Northwest’s indigenous tribes and the first Jesuit priest to the region.