Archive for December, 2009

And As For Me

Posted By Zócalo On December 14, 2009

by Patty Seyburn

Mark lived with a closet pornographer
and if we returned from Caramba’s too
soon, bottles of baby oil would be placed
strategically around the apartment
near gestures of drapery, gauzing

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Echoes of History in the Middle East

Posted By Zócalo On December 11, 2009

Three Kings, by Lloyd C. Gardner

Three Kings: The Rise of an American Empire in the Middle East After World War II
by Lloyd C. Gardner

Reviewed by Angilee Shah

President Barack Obama’s months of deliberation on Afghanistan — which culminated in an announcement earlier this month of a troop surge — has been a fascinating process

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Posted By Zócalo On December 11, 2009

Watch Twilight: A Transylvanian reviews the popular vampire movies. Reality: A brief history of reality television and why the ’00s were so good to the form. Oprah: Is she the last true television genius? Objects Consumer: Where Wal-Mart fears to tread, Chinese merchants go. Christmas: Why the tree is out, and the faux-tree is in. [...]

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Tintin for Grown-Ups

Posted By Zócalo On December 10, 2009

Jean-Marie Apostolidès, a professor of French and drama at Stanford University, last read the Tintin comic books — about a youthful globe-trotting journalist — when he was a boy. Decades later he picked the series up again. “I was amazed at the enormous artistic and literary quality of the series,” he said. “I realized I was confronting a great piece of art, and that was surprising.” Apostolidès, author of The Metamorphoses of Tintin: or Tintin for Adults, chatted with Zócalo about why Tintin never made it big in America, how he got over his initial controversial attitudes, and how he embodies the myth of eternal, powerful youth.

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Studying: Fidelity

Posted By Zócalo On December 10, 2009

by Collier Nogues

We pay attention as dues to each other.
We run out of capacity to attend as we should.

Dinner turns strange,

triangles of desire running through us
while we sit in our proper pairs.

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Articles

Feuilleton
Friday, December 3, 2010
How One Family Created Chinese America
Zócalo

The Lucky Ones, by Mae Ngai The Lucky Ones: One Family and the Extraordinary Invention of Chinese America by Mae Ngai Hyphenated cultures seem to be a natural part of California’s landscape today, but it wasn’t always so. The Lucky Ones by Mae Ngai offers a fresh look at California history by reconstructing the lives of immigrant and second generation pioneers who lived between cultures when it was not such a common phenomenon. Ngai’s narrative brings Chinese Americans into a richer tradition of historical storytelling by humanizing an ambivalent, middle-class immigrant family, situating their lives within the more well-known histories of Chinese laborers and those who suffered from the 1882 Exclusion Act.

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