Class and Classiness

Edward P. Jones’ story Bad Neighbors, on the intertwined questions of class, identity, and values in a Washington, D.C. neighborhood, is riveting. I have dirty rice from the store on the corner, and the fall afternoon is beautiful. The radio is singing, “It takes a worried man, to sing a worried song / I’m worried … More Class and Classiness

Signs and Symptoms

It is Columbus Day. Mamita Mala has written a poem about it. Her site has been brought to my attention by Kactus. Kara has an excellent post on the recent counterinsurgency legislation, in which she reminds us that Halliburton subsidiary KBR has been awarded a large, no-bid contract for the construction of detention camps within … More Signs and Symptoms

Iraq for Sale

Now I have seen Iraq for Sale, on war profiteering, and I recommend it. It is a little bit homemade, and it does not say anything that people who are aware of the Iraq situation do not already know. On the other hand, for people who do not know how much money Blackwater, Halliburton, KBR, … More Iraq for Sale

Mulatos de Esmeraldas

Here is a beautiful painting, Mulatos de Esmeraldas, made in 1599 by Adrián Sánchez Galque, an ‘Indian’ painter of the Quito school. Right now you can see it in person at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Karen Wilkin reviewed the show for the Wall Street Journal. Esmeraldas, on the north coast of Ecuador, is still … More Mulatos de Esmeraldas

Tony Judt

Was the Polish Embassy of New York within its rights to get NYU history professor Tony Judt disinvited from giving a talk for a community group which rents Embassy space? Judt’s views on Israel do not coincide with those of the Anti-Defamation League (or of the State Department). The ADL and others put pressure upon … More Tony Judt

Township Rock

I saw Tsotsi this evening, a much awarded film set in a Johannesburg township and based on a novel by Athol Fugard. I notice that films which receive this many awards, tend to be sentimental. They are often some sort of redemption narrative. This is especially true when they are foreign. It is as though … More Township Rock

On Immigration

This luminous day is dedicated to Olodumare, who rules the invisible realm. We can buy songs of the Cuban orixás in historical recordings from the Smithsonian Institution, and find stories about them on Orishanet. And if YouTube supported WordPress, I would add videos of Ifa ceremonies in Nigeria right here. Also on YouTube is a … More On Immigration

Mystic Garden

“The state of Oaxaca has been kidnapped, as has the rest of the country,” begins an article in today’s La Jornada. The state or condition of having been kidnapped is descriptive, of more than one state and more than one country. I had not bought a Dylan album in decades, but I have been listening … More Mystic Garden

“Deportees”

Now it is the weekend, so it is time to sing. I am singing this afternoon from a café off Franklin Street in the Faubourg Marigny, where it is exceedingly pleasant. Our song, an old one by Woody Guthrie, is sung in remembrance of the people whose lives will be made more difficult by the … More “Deportees”