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Zeteo (ζητέω): to challenge, question, dispute, explore the forgotten and ignored

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Monthly Archives: August 2014

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Bonobos

What Is Permitted—To People and Bonobos

August 18, 2014 by Walter Cummins

The Sources of Morality By Walter Cummins Review of The Bonobo and the Atheist by Frans de Waal (W. W. Norton, 2013) [print_link] [email_link]   Primatologist Frans de Waal in his book The Atheist and the Bonobo (W. W. Norton, 2013) uses bonobos to take on God, or more precisely those people who are convinced moral standards would not exist without the authority of a Supreme Being. From that perspective, morality is an attribute limited to the human realm, essential to our unique and special […]

Categories: Review • Tags: animals, ethics, literature, philosophy

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Rich in symbolism, short on power

August 18, 2014 by Alexia Raynal

The problem of representation in children and childhood narratives One of the greater challenges of writing about children has to do with representation. Children are rarely given a space to speak freely. Because their voices are not accessible to adults, people who speak about children run the risk of seeming to speak for them. Sadly, this is also the very goal of others: to manipulate what children—inadvertently or not—communicate. In most cultures, childhood is a symbol of innocence. This vulnerability is used to justify political action. I […]

Categories: Alexia Raynal, ZiR • Tags: apartheid, childhood, children, ideology, innocence, political propaganda, politics

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We’re not here for you to upbraid

August 17, 2014 by William Eaton

A very loose translation of a once better known Boris Vian lyric [print_link] [email_link]   One nice morning in July, the alarm At dawn it breaks the calm “My doll,” I said, “better shake a leg” Today’s the today, not to be missed Get to the boulevard without delay To see parading the Zanzibar King But suddenly the police — we’re turned away And I replied We’re not here for you to upbraid We’re just here to see the parade We’re […]

Categories: William Eaton, ZiR • Tags: French, jazz, songs, translation

1

Paternity Leave and Daddy Blogging: What it Means to ‘Be A Man’

August 16, 2014 by William Eaton

Last week I was away in California for an old friend’s wedding, and a trip up and down the Pacific coast that reunited me with friends I have not seen in some time; since the revolution began in Egypt or since she moved across the country when we were 10 year-old best friends. Although I am planning a wedding of my own, all the talk of marriage and new engagements can be a bit grotesque to me. I was pleasantly surprised, […]

Categories: Caterina Gironda, ZiR • Tags: masculinity, NPR

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Language and identity as shifting as the sands – Shadow of the silk road, 1 of 3

August 14, 2014 by William Eaton

Read part 2 (21 Aug) about the Road’s ethnic diversity ranging from Europe to Korea Part 3 (28 Aug) discusses Thubron’s journey through Afghanistan and Iran, ending in Turkey   Colin Thubron’s Shadow of the Silk Road records his 7,000 mile journey from Xi’an China to Antioch, Turkey (today Antaky). Thubron is a peerless author of travel books. The Times of London placed him 45th on their list of the 50 greatest writers since 1945. The New York Times says he is “the dean of […]

Categories: Tucker Cox, ZiR

2

Isolation vs. Solitude

August 13, 2014 by William Eaton

With Drew Whitcup on vacation, Zeteo Associate Gayle Rodda Kurtz is reading Montaigne— When did the celebrated notion of our individualism slip into a form of isolation? We are familiar with the sight of those around us in public spaces hunched over their electronic devices and addicted to mindless electronic games and time-wasting media activities. Thinking that we were in our own private worlds, we now know that we are caught up in complex systems of surveillance technologies. This toxic […]

Categories: Gayle Rodda Kurtz, ZiR

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poetry

The Bedroom is Trees

August 12, 2014 by Ana Maria Caballero

Last week I wrote about a three-way interview published by “The Review Review” about the future of poetry. The three-way was composed of Rob MacDonald of Sixth Finch Journal,  Matt Hart of Forklift Ohio Journal and Gale Marie Thompson of Jellyfish Magazine.  I recommend at least perusing the article to get a sense of what people in the poetry world (and these are very relevant people within that cloaked realm) have to say about the general future of the genre. But what is truly special about the […]

Categories: Ana Maria Caballero, ZiR • Tags: books, literature, poetry, reading, writing

2

Waksler & Dickens: Different, not less

August 11, 2014 by Alexia Raynal

Frances Chaput Waksler’s writings on the sociology of childhood have been a must for people interested in working with children for decades. Her article “Studying Children: Phenomenological Insights” (1986) is one of her most quoted texts. In it, Waksler encourages her readers to substitute the term “less” with “different.” Children as a category, she argues, are not less serious, less knowledgeable, less important than adults: The distinction between adult and child may become irrelevant as we come to focus simply on varieties of […]

Categories: Alexia Raynal, ZiR • Tags: Charles Dickens, childhood, children, education, Great Expectations, literature

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Figuring it out

August 10, 2014 by William Eaton

  From one of the songs of The Pajama Game, which won the Tony Award for the best musical of 1955: I figured it out I figured it out With a pencil and a pad I figured it out! Seven and a half cents doesn’t buy a hell of a lot, Seven and a half cents doesn’t mean a thing! But give it to me every hour, Forty hours every week, And that’s enough for me to be living like […]

Categories: William Eaton, ZiR • Tags: Broadway theater, capitalism, consumerism, Hollywood, unions

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