Recent News from Columbia
June 18, 2026
Bruno Bosteels Translates Alain Badiou on Nietzsche
Columbia’s dean of humanities explains why he finds translating another person’s work deeply satisfying.
June 17, 2026
Early Career Columbia Researchers Advocate for Federal Funding on Capitol Hill
A delegation of researchers traveled to Washington, D.C., as Congress considers its 2027 budget.
June 17, 2026
Uncovering Upper Manhattan’s Connections to the Revolutionary War With Bundles Scholar Gail Addiss
From Morris-Jumel Mansion to Dyckman Farmhouse Museum, Addiss shared historical sites to visit Uptown.
Videos
Research & Discovery
Campus & Community
National & Global Affairs
Arts & Humanities
Katharina Volk’s research interests include Latin literature of the late Republican and early Imperial periods, Roman philosophy (especially Cicero), and intellectual history.
Katharina Volk’s new translation of Cicero explores this timeless question.
Michelangelo “Mic” Muraro, left, former owner of Columbia’s Casa Muraro in Venice, with Peggy Guggenheim, right, in 1961.
The historical building is now hosting an exhibition of work by artist Johanna Unzueta.
Beth Berkowitz’s research interests include rabbinic literature, Bible exegesis, Jewish difference, and critical animal studies.
In her new book, Beth Berkowitz looks at the Bible and rabbinic literature to reimagine the bonds between animals.
Columbia in the News
‘All Men Are Created Equal’? Not Everyone Agrees.
The New York Times, June 11
How Much Alcohol Is Actually Safe? A New Study Challenges Old Advice
U.S. News & World Report, June 9








