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Monthly Archives: April 2011
Sainthood and Celebrity
by J. Terry Todd It's the triumph of the mediated “Old World” spectacle this week, with London's royal wedding and the May Day beatification of Pope John Paul II in Rome. Of course, the event in Rome is much more … Continue reading
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Exploring the Endless Possibilians
David Eagleman, a neuroscientist recently profiled in The New Yorker, sounds like the smartest person I will never meet. Truly, just trying to keep up with what Eagleman is currently working on sequentially taxed, depressed and delighted me. Don't expect … Continue reading
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This Just In: Gays and Lesbians Attend Evangelical Colleges!
by Richard Flory Shocking! According to the New York Times, there are gay and lesbian students at evangelical colleges, and they actually want to be recognized by their schools for the people they are, not as some sort of sexual … Continue reading
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Pink Toenails and Dragging Knuckles: Dominionism Behind the News
by John Adams As the saying goes, a picture is worth a thousand words. But the pair of images that dominated the media scene over the past week has spawned many more words than that. “Racist,” “transgender child propaganda” and … Continue reading
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Comparing Coverage of the French Law in France and the U.S.
by Albert Sabaté The recent banning of the niqab, or full veil, in France is just the latest episode in the West's tumultuous relationship with Islam and its own values of multiculturalism. News media coverage of the ban in France … Continue reading
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Behind the Veil: France's Ban on the Burqa
by Robyn Carolyn Price Two veiled women were arrested in France last Monday as they protested a law that, effective that day, banned the wearing of burqas and niqabs in public spaces. The law is considered by some – both … Continue reading
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Doomsday in 2012: A Bad Idea Goes Global
by Salman Hameed Next year is going to be an ordeal for astronomers. We regularly field (or at least endure) questions and claims about astrology, alien abductions, UFOs, crop-circles and beings from other dimensions. But we're bracing ourselves for a … Continue reading
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Advocate for Coexistence, in Death and in Life
by Mary Slosson The murder of Palestinian-Israeli actor and filmmaker Juliano Mer-Khamis last Monday highlighted the tragic, ongoing wages of conflict in that part of the world. It also drew attention to the role of film in shaping popular understandings … Continue reading
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Framing the Budget Battle: Who Hogs (and Who Holds) the Camera?
by Lee Gilmore Friday's narrowly averted government shutdown–and the endemic economic and cultural disputes underlying those events–saw women's health care batted about like a cat toy between the nation's dominant political factions. The threatened de-funding of Planned Parenthood was positioned … Continue reading
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Faith, Money and Politics: The Supreme Court Rules on Donations to Religious Schools
by Christin Davis In a 5-4 decision on “Arizona Christian School Tuition Organization v. Winn,” the U.S. Supreme Court ruled this week that tuition payments to religious schools are eligible for tax credits and cannot be challenged on constitutional grounds. … Continue reading
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