Banned Books Week: The Burning of the Mayan Codex

2024-09-07T00:21:29+00:00

The Mayans believed that writing was sacred (as I do). They had one of the most advanced writing systems in the ancient world. Deciphering them was difficult since few books survived the Spanish Inquisition.

Banned Books Week: The Burning of the Mayan Codex2024-09-07T00:21:29+00:00

Meet Me at the Mark Bradford Paintings

2024-02-21T21:58:59+00:00

I’ve followed Bradford for years, not just because he’s an LA artist, but because his works mirror the cultural history of this city - from the race riots, the Grim Sleeper and Manson murders, and the sad decline of entire urban neighborhoods.

Meet Me at the Mark Bradford Paintings2024-02-21T21:58:59+00:00

Virginia Woolf: Genius and Madness

2024-03-12T03:25:49+00:00

Published in 1931, The Waves pioneered a stream-of-consciousness style that really just mimicked the voices in her head. She battled mental illness all her life, and in the end, she lost, filling her pockets with rocks and drowning herself in the River Ouse.

Virginia Woolf: Genius and Madness2024-03-12T03:25:49+00:00

Banned Books Week: The Rise and Fall of Moorish Spain

2024-02-21T21:58:51+00:00

The Moors pulled Europe out of the Dark Ages by bringing agriculture, architecture, medicine, science, and libraries. But after the Reconquista of Moorish Spain in 1492, over 1 million non-Catholic books were burned, most of them Arabic, but also Jewish books and those on the sciences.

Banned Books Week: The Rise and Fall of Moorish Spain2024-02-21T21:58:51+00:00

Banned Books Week: Soviet-Era Writers

2024-02-21T21:58:46+00:00

Upon the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, the state library in Moscow had collected over 27,000 books that were banned.

Banned Books Week: Soviet-Era Writers2024-02-21T21:58:46+00:00

Life and Literature, The Kite Runner

2024-02-21T21:58:38+00:00

Khaled Hosseini describes an Afghanistan before the Taliban and the wars that ravaged it, where childhood dreams soared as high as the kites they flew, girls were educated to become doctors, and the Buddhas of Bamiyan once stood safely. Now, two decades after publication is another generation who might know nothing of it but war.

Life and Literature, The Kite Runner2024-02-21T21:58:38+00:00

Intellectual Equals: Simone de Beauvoir and Jean-Paul Sartre

2024-02-21T21:58:35+00:00

Like Kahlo and Rivera and Henry Miller and Anaïs Nin, they were intellectual equals who had polyamorous affairs. But de Beauvoir was unique - she would take on young female lovers, as if in training, and then pass them on.

Intellectual Equals: Simone de Beauvoir and Jean-Paul Sartre2024-02-21T21:58:35+00:00

Jackson Pollock

2024-02-27T20:53:05+00:00

In 1949, Life Magazine featured a cover story on Pollock, asking, "𝘐𝘴 𝘩𝘦 𝘵𝘩𝘦 𝘨𝘳𝘦𝘢𝘵𝘦𝘴𝘵 𝘭𝘪𝘷𝘪𝘯𝘨 𝘱𝘢𝘪𝘯𝘵𝘦𝘳 𝘪𝘯 𝘵𝘩𝘦 𝘜.𝘚.?" It was meant to be sarcastic, but the world said yes.

Jackson Pollock2024-02-27T20:53:05+00:00

The Fire This Time, Rereading James Baldwin

2024-02-21T21:55:10+00:00

Born in 1924 in a segregated Harlem as the son of a preacher man, Baldwin would go on to become one of the most resonant voices of the Civil Rights Movement. There was always something fearless and revolutionary in his writings. And I love him most for that.

The Fire This Time, Rereading James Baldwin2024-02-21T21:55:10+00:00
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