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Tag: America

Book Review: Where The Light Fell, memoir by Philip Yancey

Posted on September 7, 2022September 7, 2022 by David Barker

Where The Light Fell is a “Covid-aware” memoir, which is to say that even though the book narrates and reflects upon earlier times, it keeps one of its bookish eyes on the present moment and, while barely saying so, draws a line of continuity from past events to the present lunacy that grips America today….

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Book Review: Wayward, by Dana Spiotta

Posted on July 13, 2021October 16, 2022 by David Barker

Spiotta has created not a novel so much as a record of the American zeitgeist with its strange mix of idyllic New England towns and protofascist MAGA mobs, its glorious universities and rampant anti-intellectualism, its shining democratic institutions and its racist trigger-happy police.

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Remembering The 2017 Inauguration

Posted on January 19, 2021October 16, 2022 by David Barker

It was odd to travel through a red state at that particular moment in history. In fact, the western shore of Florida was experiencing a red tide and people with respiratory issues complained that it was difficult to breathe. No kidding.

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The Origins of Totalitarianism in the Age of Trump

Posted on October 22, 2020October 16, 2022 by David Barker

There is a temptation to treat Arendt like the American Psychiatric Association’s DSMV: if an authoritarian leader meets enough of the documented criteria, then we can diagnose him with the political disease called totalitarianism.

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Yours, for probably always: Martha Gellhorn’s Letters

Posted on August 10, 2020October 16, 2022 by David Barker

This is a curated collection of letters both from Martha Gellhorn and addressed to her from a variety of correspondents, most notably H. G. Wells and Eleanor Roosevelt, interpolated with Janet Somerville’s contextual notes. The overall effect is much like a tragic epistolary novel of grand dimensions.

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Covid-19: Before and After

Posted on July 15, 2020October 16, 2022 by David Barker

My understanding is that Karens throughout the American South still assert the right to go maskless. Presumably street photography in places like Houston and Tallahassee has not yet assumed an after-time look. That might change once all the Karens have died…

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The Consequences of Posting Photos on Instagram

Posted on April 16, 2020October 16, 2022 by David Barker

Every year, personal autonomy in the arts suffocates a little more as corporate interests suck more oxygen out of the creative atmosphere.

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Trump Bans 3M Export of N-95 Masks to Canada

Posted on April 6, 2020October 16, 2022 by David Barker

Canada may end up adopting the province of Québec’s motto: je me souviens. In years to come, we will say to ourselves: I remember the day America betrayed us.

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White Noise, by Don DeLillo

Posted on March 26, 2020October 16, 2022 by David Barker

When power seeks to exploit disaster, we look to the arts for our prophetic voices, those who will ground authority by exposing folly and drawing us back to the centre. In White Noise, DeLillo does this through satire.

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George Orwell and Graffiti

Posted on March 25, 2020October 16, 2022 by David Barker

Near the end of Homage to Catalonia, George Orwell’s memoir of his service in the Spanish Civil War, Orwell confesses that he was not above resorting to graffiti.

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Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge

Posted on February 12, 2020October 16, 2022 by David Barker

Every now and then, Kylo Ren made an appearance accompanied by two stormtroopers. Notwithstanding the park’s ban on guns—even toy guns—the stormtroopers carried blasters and swaggered, stiff-torsoed, like they were US Marines.

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Last of the Brat Tribe

Posted on December 13, 2019October 16, 2022 by David Barker

The System woke the Agent twenty-four hours before it woke the President. That was the protocol. Twenty-four hours would give the Agent time to secure the bunker and to become clear-headed enough to serve the President’s needs.

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The Ghost Ranch Narrative

Posted on July 25, 2014October 17, 2022 by David Barker

I spent last week on a photo workshop with Richard Choe at the Ghost Ranch near Abiquiu, NM, a 75 minute drive northwest of Santa Fe.

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Jim in Taos, New Mexico

Posted on July 24, 2014October 17, 2022 by David Barker

Last Friday, I found myself in the town of Taos in New Mexico which was setting up for a weekend fiesta. According to Wikipedia, Taos is one of the oldest continuously inhabited communities in North America (more than a thousand years).

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Narcissism as a Strategy of Resistance

Posted on April 8, 2014October 17, 2022 by David Barker

This morning, while staring at myself in the bathroom mirror, I had a thought about narcissism. I wanted to take a selfie to capture the moment but was concerned about what people (in this instance, my wife) would think of me. The last thing I want is for people to think I’m narcissistic.

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