Archive for February, 2010

Wonder Woman and the Gravity Monster

Posted By Zócalo On February 18, 2010

by Tony Barnstone

Miss Wonder Woman, Amazon, is sore
from twenty thousand crunches every night,
but when she fought the Mars Men and she tore
her costume she knew to get her abs tight

Read More

The Sounds of Islam

Posted By Zócalo On February 17, 2010

Rock & Roll Jihad, by Salman Ahmad

Rock & Roll Jihad: A Muslim Rock Star’s Revolution
by Salman Ahmad

Rock & Roll Jihad is a straightforward autobiography of a man who, by age 18….

Read More

Worse Than War

Posted By Zócalo On February 16, 2010

Worse Than War, by Daniel Jonah Goldhagen

Worse Than War: Genocide, Eliminationism, and the Ongoing Assault on Humanity
by Daniel Jonah Goldhagen

Daniel Jonah Goldhagen made quite a splash when he blamed ordinary Germans for the Holocaust….

Read More

Advice

Posted By Zócalo On February 15, 2010

by Matthew Schwartz

She gives me the clichéd line with half a smile—
you really should travel, Matt, before you have a family,
before, she seems to say, you run out of time.

Read More

Roadside America

Posted By Zócalo On February 12, 2010

John Margolies’ Roadside America captures fading landmarks to American automobile culture. Margolies, appetite whetted on road trips with parents who never pulled over, began crisscrossing the country in the mid-1970s. He documented against blue skies motels, drive-ins, diners, gas stations and other businesses with eye-catching architecture….

Read More

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.

Poetry
This week in L.A.
From the green room
 
Connecting People to Ideas and to Each Other

Thank you to Zócalo sponsors:

 

 

Wordpress template made by HeJian