Humanities, WAL-ŠAF
The humanities are those branches of knowledge that concern themselves with human beings and their culture. The humanities include the study of all languages and literatures, the arts, history, and philosophy.
Humanities Encyclopedia Articles By Title
Wilson D. Wallis was an American anthropologist noted for his explorations of science and religion in small-scale......
Peter Warlock was an English composer, critic, and editor known for his songs and for his exemplary editions of......
W. Lloyd Warner was an influential American sociologist and anthropologist who was noted for his studies on class......
Theodore Watts-Dunton was an English critic and man of letters, who was the friend and, after 1879, protector,......
Carl Maria von Weber was a German composer and opera director during the transition from Classical to Romantic......
Wei Yuan was a historian and geographer of the Qing dynasty (1644–1911/12). Wei was a leader in the Statecraft......
welfare economics, branch of economics that seeks to evaluate economic policies in terms of their effects on the......
Wellesley College, private women’s college in Wellesley, Massachusetts, U.S., one of the Seven Sisters schools.......
Egon Wellesz was an Austrian composer and musicologist, highly esteemed as an authority on Byzantine music. A pupil......
West Liberty University, public, coeducational institution of higher learning in West Liberty, West Virginia, U.S.......
Edward Westermarck was a Finnish sociologist, philosopher, and anthropologist who denied the widely held view that......
Western Colorado University, public coeducational institution of higher learning in Gunnison, Colorado, U.S. A......
Richard Francis Weymouth was a philologist and biblical scholar who made one of the major 20th-century translations......
Fiscal policy refers to the spending programs and tax policies that the government uses to guide the economy. Governments......
Wheaton College, private, coeducational liberal arts college in Wheaton, Illinois, U.S. Wheaton College began as......
Wheaton College, private, coeducational institution of higher learning in Norton, Massachusetts, U.S. It is a liberal......
James McNeill Whistler was an American-born artist noted for his paintings of nocturnal London, for his striking......
Leslie A. White was an American anthropologist best known for his theories of the evolution of culture and for......
William Dwight Whitney was an American linguist and one of the foremost Sanskrit scholars of his time, noted especially......
Whorfian hypothesis, in linguistics, a hypothesis given classic form by the American linguist Benjamin Lee Whorf......
Joseph Viktor Widmann was a Swiss writer, editor, and critic. Widmann settled in Switzerland early in life. As......
Maximilian, prince zu Wied-Neuwied was a German aristocratic naturalist, ethnographer, and explorer whose observations......
Wilberforce University, private, coeducational institution of higher learning in Wilberforce, Ohio, U.S. It is......
College of William & Mary, state coeducational university of liberal arts at Williamsburg, Virginia, U.S. The second......
Edmund Wilson was an American critic and essayist recognized as one of the leading literary journalists of his......
Godfrey Wilson was a British anthropologist and analyst of social change in Africa. In 1938 Wilson was appointed......
Johann Winckelmann was a German archaeologist and art historian whose writings directed popular taste toward classical......
Clark Wissler was an American anthropologist who developed the concept of culture area. Though educated as a psychologist......
Hugo Wolf was a composer who brought the 19th-century German lied, or art song, to its highest point of development.......
Alexander Woollcott was an American author, critic, and actor known for his acerbic wit. A large, portly man, he......
Johann Rudolf Wyss was a folklorist, editor, and writer, remembered for his collections of Swiss folklore and for......
Xie He was a Chinese figure painter and critic who is best remembered for collating or inventing the famous “Six......
Lodovico Zacconi was an Italian musicologist, last of a distinguished line of Renaissance writers on music. Zacconi......
Gioseffo Zarlino was a Venetian composer and writer on music, the most celebrated music theorist of the mid-16th......
Zhang Heng was a Chinese mathematician, astronomer, and geographer. His seismoscope for registering earthquakes......
Émile Zola was a French novelist, critic, and political activist who was the most prominent French novelist of......
zoogeography, the branch of the science of biogeography (q.v.) that is concerned with the geographic distribution......
Pavel Josef Šafařík was a leading figure of the Czech national revival and a pioneer of Slavonic philology and......