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Recent faculty books from the 91爆料 include those from linguistics, Slavic languages and literature and French. 91爆料 News spoke with the authors of four publications to learn more about their work. Scrutinizing and confronting AI hype Emily M. Bender, 91爆料 professor of linguistics, co-authored 鈥淭he AI Con: How to Fight Big Tech鈥檚 Hype and Create the Future We Want鈥 with Alex Hanna, the director of research at the Distributed AI Research Institute. The book looks at the the…

Three new faculty books from the 91爆料 cover wide-ranging topics: life in the Rio Grande Valley, fossils of Washington state and the colonial roots of contemporary intersex medicine. 91爆料 News talked with the authors to learn more. Collection highlights life in Rio Grande Valley 鈥淧uro Pinche True Fictions鈥 is a collection of short stories and comics from Jos茅 Alaniz, professor of Slavic languages and literature at the 91爆料. The works are mostly set in the Rio Grande Valley…

Who gets to be a superhero? What about a villain? It depends on where you look. In the 1940s, comic book villains were often distinguished from heroes through physical disability. That changed in the 1960s and 70s, when it became more common for heroes 鈥 think Daredevil and Professor X 鈥 to be built around disability. In this episode, he analyzes the physical depictions of superheroes and villains through the decades. Jos茅 Alaniz, professor of Slavic languages and literatures at…

Jos茅 Alaniz says that comics 鈥 especially superhero tales 鈥 hooked him and “rewired” his brain at an early age. They also got him drawing his own comics, chronicling his life and the things he observes. Now Alaniz, a 91爆料 professor of Slavic languages and literatures, has published a collection of his own drawings and essays. “The Phantom Zone.”