• Essay

    Who Is Shakespeare For?

    I Asked My Students to Take the Bard Off His Pedestal—It Let Us Reconsider His Place in Our World

    by Lee Emrich

    “What do we do with Shakespeare?” “Who is Shakespeare for?” “What would it look like to reject Shakespeare?” …

  • Essay

    The Genius Mexican Composer History Forgot

    Uncovering Juventino Rosas, Whose Waltz Took the World By Storm But Whose Story Remains a Mystery

    by Oliver Mayer

    Juventino Rosas’ waltz “Sobre las Olas” (Over the Waves) is perhaps the most famous song of its generation …

Connecting California

A Movie That Might Be Worse Than Civil War

‘Civil War’ Offers A Vision of California Fighting the U.S. That Matches Foreign Propaganda—and Misses the Point

by Joe Mathews

The new film Civil War is a historic cinematic achievement. British director Alex Garland has made a movie that might be worse than a real American civil war.
  Perhaps that was Garland’s intention. His film is a series of horrifying set pieces—Abu Ghraib-style torture by gas station attendants, government aerial bombings of civilians, summary execution of journalists, a massive California and Texas invasion of Washington, D.C.—that seem to add up to a warning. If we don’t steer away from our current path of polarization and political conflict …

Essay

Is the Wilderness Act Still Protecting Nature?

The Landmark 1964 Law Is Now Preventing Effective Land Management and Critical Climate Research

by Daniel T. Blumstein and Thomas B. Smith

At the end of 2023, four environmental groups sued the National Park Service and invoked the Wilderness Act to stop the replanting of trees following a catastrophic wildfire in Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks. Around the same time, the National Park Service announced that it aimed to invoke the Wilderness Act to limit the use of fixed anchors on Yosemite’s iconic big wall climbs.
  How did a law created 60 years ago to protect nature in undeveloped areas come to do something else entirely—and, in the process …

  • Why Shouldn't Phillis Wheatley's Poems Show Up at an NFL Game?

    At Last Night’s Event—”Can a Football Stadium Be a Black History Museum?”—Panelists Argued to Democratize Culture

    by Jackie Mansky

    On the rarified second level of SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California, amid premium owner suites and premium beer sales, there’s an Angela Davis quote plastered on a wall.
    “Our histories never unfold in isolation,” reads the excerpt from the scholar and activist’s 2015 book, Freedom Is a Constant Struggle. “We cannot truly tell what we consider to be our own histories …

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