Boston Review

@BostonReview

A magazine of ideas, independent and nonprofit since 1975.

Cambridge, MA
ಮೇ 2009 ಸಮಯದಲ್ಲಿ ಸೇರಿದ್ದಾರೆ

@BostonReview ತಡೆಹಿಡಿಯಲಾಗಿದೆ

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  1. ಪಿನ್ ಮಾಡಿದ ಟ್ವೀಟ್

    What is education for? A new forum with , , , , and more.

  2. If an inclusive democratic society is our goal, how can we interpret our racial past to sustain that hope?

  3. Liberalism has become the philosophy of individual rights, but liberals once focused on public-minded duties, too.

  4. Among the chief casualties of neoliberalism is the very possibility of solidarity—a collective, democratic future.

  5. The imperatives of employment and global competitiveness didn't always dominate education policy and discussion.

  6. Movements against inequality and injustice face pressure to organize through the Democratic Party—they should resist

  7. POETS: Enter the Annual Boston Review Poetry Contest for your chance at $1500 and publication!

  8. Celebrating single women's power means ignoring their vulnerability in a society that still privileges marriage.

  9. With Bernie Sanders’s campaign reeling, what’s next for progressive activists?

  10. The poet takes an otherwise ordinary object and focuses language upon it until it flames.

  11. Do the humanities, moreso than STEM, foster the the skills and mindset required for political participation?

  12. To the "self-seekers" prized by today's employers, experiences of class and solidarity are impossible and irrelevant

  13. What the Kerner Report got wrong about policing: the 2nd part of an ongoing discussion about race riots of the 1960s

  14. Enter the Boston Review Contest! Prize: $1500 and publication. All applicants get a half-yr subscription!

  15. Even under conditions of globalization, workers in wealthy countries needn't fear competition from the world's poor.

  16. America's history of racism produces ample despair. Can activists find in it a narrative of hope?

  17. Why humanities? Because reading and writing are the basic instruments of political action.

  18. To empower single women, replace the security of the family with a social equivalent.

  19. Public education should make citizens, not just workers, and that means focusing on the humanities—not just STEM.

  20. 50 years after identifying white racism as the source of 60s riots, the Kerner Report continues to reverberate.

  21. You had just gotten so young it was all I could do to contain you - John Ashberry, "A Disservice" via

  22. If an inclusive democratic society is our goal, how can we interpret our racial past to sustain that hope?

  23. In the age of human rights, duties—of people to each other, citizens toward govs, states toward states—are forgotten

  24. Yale’s president sets a dangerous precedent by claiming he can make something less racist by his say-so.

  25. The movement for equality and justice should continue to organize independent of a political party.

  26. "And you know what that means: the sky in a drawer, the underwear underworld on the floor of the moon." -Ashbery:

  27. by calling police "symbols"of white power/racism/repression downplayed how police were also its agents

  28. Excellent by on the relationship between human rights and duties via

  29. Officials papered over deliberate police lawlessness in response to 1960s urban rebellions. Have things changed?

  30. Important piece from on the dangerous and historically anomalous absence of "public language of duties"

  31. America's history of racism produces ample despair. Melvin Rogers asks that we find in it a narrative of hope.

  32. Liberalism has become the philosophy of individual rights, but liberals once focused on public-minded duties, too.

  33. Critics misread liberalism when they mistake it for libertarianism or naked egosim Rights vs. Duties | Boston Review

  34. The Kerner report, on 60s urban rebellions, got policing wrong: police, not activists, were main source of violence.

  35. Enter the BR Poetry Contest. Prize: $1,500 and publication. The June 1 deadline is approaching!

  36. Does the middle class in rich countries need to suffer so that global poor can become richer? M Steinbaum doubts it

  37. "Democracy is not an instinct but rather a practice demanding training and motivation."

  38. When Gandhi insisted that there are no human rights without duties.

  39. This piece by reminds me of an interview with Lucille Clifton in which she unpacks joy(!). Thank you.

  40. Humans everywhere have rights, but do not forget that rights are protected by the fulfillment of duties.

  41. Public education should prepare students for future civic agency, not just job-competitiveness.

  42. In the age of human rights, duties—of people to each other, citizens toward govs, states toward states—are forgotten

  43. BR's spring poetry reads—from , Erica Jo Brown, , Brandon Brown, & Gregory Donovan

  44. If an inclusive democratic society is our goal, how can we interpret the our racial past to sustain that hope?

  45. Today liberalism is the chief booster of human rights. Liberals used to argue about what we owe each other.

  46. Martha Nussbaum on the perils of patriotism and the lessons we can learn from Tagore.

  47. You had just gotten so young it was all I could do to contain you -John Ashbery

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