Archive for April, 2011

34

Posted By Zócalo On April 20, 2011

doublerainbow_34

by Jane Miller

The place may be clean and tidy

and have for furniture only a mat

if there are windows if they are large …

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Has the Age of Environmentalism Really Brought Us Closer to Nature?

Posted By Zócalo On April 20, 2011

hiking_environmentalismroundtable

Environmental issues are a bigger part of the collective consciousness than ever before. Recycling has become the norm, water conservation is a major issue in the American West, and environmental disasters like the Deepwater Horizon oil spill are front-page news. Yet by many measures, Americans’ relationship to nature is at an all-time low, as we spend more time inside in front of screens. In advance of a panel on “Why We Love Trees” at Zócalo on April 21, we asked experts about whether environmentalism has improved our relationship to nature…

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No News is Good News

Posted By Zócalo On April 20, 2011

kenny speech

Economist Charles Kenny began his lecture at the Goethe-Institut by explaining the major problem with his own new book.

“It’s about exciting stuff that doesn’t happen. The book is about how much more frequently around the world nothing much is going on. Nobody starves, nobody gets sick, nobody gets shot, and nobody dies.” …

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Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death

Posted By Zócalo On April 19, 2011

policearrest_rightsofthepeople

The Rights of the People: How Our Search for Safety Invades our Liberties
by David Shipler

Reviewed by Adam Fleisher

One might get the wrong impression of an author who passionately argues the government is infringing the liberty and privacy of ordinary Americans, stoking that “red-blooded American revulsion” when our elected leaders trample our Constitution. It may not help matters to know that he sees potentially ominous parallels with the Soviet Union. Presumably, the author of The Rights of the People is an anti-government Tea Party sort, right? …

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Birthmark

Posted By Zócalo On April 18, 2011

bust_birthmark

by Lynne Thompson

No matter where I’m living, I will always be three-firths
Mississippi where memory’s just one long train whistle…

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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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