LLILAS Benson


  • Faculty Spotlight: Daniel Brinks

    “My research is primarily about the way in which we are all constituted as citizens—whatever regime we live under—by a set of rights and duties, and about the legal scaffolding that makes those rights and duties a reality (or not).”

    Faculty Spotlight: Daniel Brinks

  • Social Inquiry, Science, and Light Espionage with Megan Raby

    Megan Raby, a historian of science and the environment whose latest book won the History of Science Society’s Philip J. Pauly Prize, discusses her current book project and the fascinating ways in which her area of study draws from multiple disciplines.

    Social Inquiry, Science, and Light Espionage with Megan Raby

  • In Memoriam: Joel F. Sherzer, Linguistic Anthropologist, Visionary Digital Archivist, and Pioneer of Speech Play and Verbal Art Studies

    Sherzer joined the faculty of the Department of Anthropology at The University of Texas at Austin (UT) in 1969, and served as its chair from 1987 to 1995. He became a member of the UT Department of Linguistics in 1978. He was the recipient of National Endowment for the Humanities fellowships in 1975 and 1997–98;…

    In Memoriam: Joel F. Sherzer, Linguistic Anthropologist, Visionary Digital Archivist, and Pioneer of Speech Play and Verbal Art Studies

  • The Exhibition on Your Screen: Selected Images from “A New Spain, 1521–1821”

    A New Spain, 1521–1821, an online exhibition, traces the cultural, social, and political evolution of the Viceroyalty of New Spain from the fall of Moctezuma’s Mexico-Tenochtitlán in 1521 until the rise of Iturbide’s Mexican Empire in 1821.

    The Exhibition on Your Screen: Selected Images from “A New Spain, 1521–1821”

  • Ticket to Read

    Fall 2020 books from our college community.

    Ticket to Read

  • UT Austin MAPATHON Helps with Disaster Relief

    Following the recent hurricanes and earthquake, LILLAS Benson joined the University of Texas Libraries and people around the world in using the OpenStreetMap platform to donate their time to hurricane relief efforts through open-source mapping. Videography and photography by Todd Bogin

    UT Austin MAPATHON Helps with Disaster Relief

  • Using Your Mellon

    The College of Liberal Arts has a long and proud tradition of preparing its graduate students to teach and conduct research in the humanities at colleges and universities around the world, and we are particularly proud of our many placements in the nation’s top institutions. However, over the past two decades academic positions in the…

    Using Your Mellon

  • Borderline: The Politics, Law and Identity of Immigration

    Temperatures hovered around the triple digits in deep South Texas when the children arrived on the U.S.-Mexico border. They traveled alone, without parents. They traveled from the faraway mountains of Guatemala and El Salvador and the depths of the world’s most violent city — San Pedro Sula in Honduras. Their numbers grew over months until…

    Borderline: The Politics, Law and Identity of Immigration