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Good Friday Links

April 10, 2020

Good Friday is all about social distancing--of the Romans from the Jews, of the disciples from Jesus, of Jesus from life, and perhaps God the Father; and perhaps Jesus from humanity as well.  Eli, eli, lama sabachthani?  May we all remember this Good Friday as an especially palpable Good Friday, now and in days to come.

 

And also, I have links for you.

 

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The power of religion qua religion in American politics; or, a link that metastasized into a comment

April 09, 2020

I meant for this to be one of my "links," but I decided it needed independent acknowledgement--both as a useful analysis of the state of American politics right now, especially in the role of religion in American politics; and as an example of how to give evidence for the independent power of religion as a political force.

Here is an...

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Just some links

April 08, 2020

Mellow day, some links for you, wherever you are.

 

 

“I doubt, in its 200-year history, the University has ever been quieter.”  This is true—a series of pictures of the eerily, spookily empty spaces of the University of Virginia, my school, in the midst of Coronavirus.  

 

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Maybe I need to write less, and less frequently?

April 07, 2020

So this is a bit counter-intuitive, especially given where we are in the world right now, but I've been sitting on it for a bit and want to think out loud.

I don’t know why I’ve been thinking of blogging as a daily activity.  I mean, I really don’t know where that imperative came from.  But it’s here, definitely; I can feel the iron of it wrapping around my soul.

 

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Monday morning links

April 06, 2020

Loneliness today, and how to exist in it: “The weird gift of loneliness is that it grounds us in our common humanity. Other people have been afraid, waited, listened for news. Other people have survived. The whole world is in the same boat. However frightened we may feel, we have never been less alone.”  

 

Social isolation? The Faroes say, hold my beer.  A...

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Writing and reality

April 01, 2020

Mostly I don't find this review very gripping, playing as it does with the whole "end of [x]" genre, in this case about the novel, but then it has these two paragraphs which seem to me both significantly right and worth mulling over:

The art of writing, too, has undergone a metamorphosis. Once a way to engage with reality, it has become primarily a status-seeking...

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Some more links, for more social distancing

March 31, 2020

Tips for surviving the now and seeing the big picture:

 

An article about “one of the oldest political frontiers in the world,” the foothills of the Zagros mountains.  For five thousand years the border separating present-day Iraq and present-day Iran has been here.  There’s even a new “discovery” of a wall there—the Gawri Chen wall—though presumably for the people living there, it was no...

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Reconceiving our political situation due to technology?

March 29, 2020

Here's a just-so story: Liberalism emerged when bourgeois economics enabled (some) individuals to have enough material wealth, and thus power, to stand up to the state and its staff, which mostly meant in early modern Europe, a struggle between the nobility and the Bourgeoisie.  Liberalism was about securing "freedom," and the main danger was the state.  There was always subsidiary attention to other forms of consolidated institutional power, but the centrality of the state was always granted.  Perhaps now we have to reconceive the dangers, to see corporate power...

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