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

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Separate but Unequal: The Sexism in Forcing Women to Play Softball

June 7, 2014 by William Eaton

I can hardly convey the long-awaited validation I felt this morning when I woke up to find Emma Span’s New York Times Op-Ed piece, Is Softball Sexist? In this article she lays out a very articulate explanation of how women were forced out of playing the sport of baseball, and why the option to play softball does not justify that exclusion. As a young girl, I was one of the best players on my co-ed little league team, 95% of which […]

Categories: Caterina Gironda, ZiR • Tags: American history, baseball, sexism, softball, sports, women

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Gender in Greek Tragedy

June 7, 2014 by Jennifer Dean

I am rereading some of the great Greek plays and playwrights in order to give myself food for thought for my thesis film which is a modern retelling of a famous Greek myth. What struck me when reading Euripides was how gender politics represents itself similarly in a play from around 400 B.C.E. as might be discussed today. In Andromache, the Chorus Leader warns Hermione: You speak too freely against your fellow women – forgivable in you, perhaps, but still, women […]

Categories: Jennifer Dean, ZiR • Tags: film, gender, women, writing

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I travel to learn – Part 2 of 3

June 5, 2014 by William Eaton

  Part 2 of 3 of Mark Twain’s memoir of his 134-day European and Holy Land cruise in 1867, the biggest selling book in his lifetime .   So said Mark Twain in is classic, travelogue, The Innocents Abroad or, The New Pilgrims’ Progress. And while he and his companions indeed discover “half the world,” the reader learns more. Page after page of Mark Twain’s Innocents (like all of his books) illustrates his brilliant writing. Twain’s facility with language, his immense […]

Categories: Tucker Cox, ZiR • Tags: travel

2
Singapore Sylvia Plath

Small Birds Converge

June 3, 2014 by Ana Maria Caballero

  I feel that there is always something dark and sinister looming over the poems of Sylvia Plath. Sure, her personal story, ending in suicide, hangs heavy. But, take this one pictured to the right, “The Manor Garden.” From the title, one could simply expect a poem about a garden, perhaps succumbing to fall.  But the season isn’t entirely clear throughout the nature imagery. Things are dying but there is also a bee abuzz. Finally, it becomes apparent that something larger […]

Categories: Ana Maria Caballero, ZiR • Tags: literature, poetry, Sylvia Plath, writing

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I’m not allowed to be bored

June 2, 2014 by Alexia Raynal

Managing children’s boredom Adam Phillips makes a good point about the way adults feel and manage children’s boredom. In On Kissing, Tickling and Being Bored: Psychoanalytic Essays of the Unexamined Life (Harvard University Press, 1994), Phillips examines the underlying meaning of people’s preoccupation with boredom. “Is it not indeed revealing,” he asks “what the child’s boredom evokes in the adults?” What concerns us, he suggests, is children’s lack of concern: Heard as a demand, sometimes as an accusation of failure or disappointment, it is rarely agreed […]

Categories: Alexia Raynal, ZiR • Tags: Adam Phillips, boredom, childhood, children, families

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The silence at the end of the tunnel

June 1, 2014 by William Eaton

  In La société de la consommation (1970; The Consumer Society) the sociologist Jean Baudrillard wrote of how the urbanization and industrialization of human life had created new rarities: “space and time, clean air, greenery, water, silence . . . Some goods, previously free and readily available, are becoming luxury goods that only a privileged few can enjoy, while manufactured goods or services are widely available.” This fits with my sense that luxuries can now be defined negatively: not owning […]

Categories: William Eaton, ZiR • Tags: Bob Dylan, consumerism, death, music, noise, Pascal, silence

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Auteur or not

May 30, 2014 by Jennifer Dean

This week I am reading On Filmmaking: An Introduction to the Craft of the Director, a book of collected essays and lectures by Alexander Mackendrick. In the introduction Paul Cronin writes: For Mackendrick, the very word ‘director’ implied being in control of other people’s skills just as much, if not more, than the exercise of one’s own craftsmanship. As he explained, ‘The true role of a director involves more than having practical experience in various technical skills – it means functioning […]

Categories: Jennifer Dean, ZiR • Tags: film

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This book is a record of a pleasure trip – Part 1 of 3

May 29, 2014 by William Eaton

Part 1 of 3 of Mark Twain’s, classic travelogue. This one discusses pilgrims, humor and innocence.   Mark Twain’s first book, The Innocents Abroad or, The New Pilgrims’ Progress is one of the best-selling travelogues of all time. Twain’s “record of a pleasure trip shows readers how they would likely see Europe and the East with their own eyes instead of the eyes of those who traveled” before them. Describing, discussing, pontificating, and observing his and fellow pilgrims’ 134–day cruise on the […]

Categories: Tucker Cox, ZiR

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poetry plath lit literature

Where Men are Mended

May 27, 2014 by William Eaton

In her poem, “The Stones,” Sylvia Plath opens: “This is the city where men are mended.” She was speaking about hospitals, where people are in fact reconstructed. The eerie way in which the poet described the process of healing makes it clear that she is not nearly as well as she would like.  Below is the full extent of the poem and Plath’s dark descent. Please click here to hear her read the poem herself. The city in the picture that […]

Categories: Ana Maria Caballero, ZiR • Tags: literature, poetry, Sylvia Plath, women, writing

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