February 2012
27 posts
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Junot Diaz Announces New Book →
Díaz returns to the short story form and focuses on the topic of love in This Is How You Lose Her, scheduled for a Sept. 11 release. A description from Riverhead books:
The stories in This Is How You Lose Her, by turns hilarious and devastating, raucous and tender, lay bare the infinite longing and inevitable weaknesses of our all-too-human hearts. They capture the heat of new passion, the...
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Vulture on Hollywood's Resistance to Black... →
On the list of the top-grossing 100 movies released last year, the only ones with a central African-American cast were Madea’s Big Happy Family, Big Mommas: Like Father, Like Son, and Jumping the Broom. (There was also The Help, which, two Oscar-nominated African-American actresses aside, was a movie told from a white point of view, with a white lead actress, white director, and based on a...
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I cannot muster the “we” except by finding the way I am tied to...
– Judith Butler, Precarious Life: The Powers of Mourning and Violence
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One’s involvement in other peoples’ lives gave one numerous small...
– Kiran Desai, The Inheritance of Loss
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Many people want to claim subalternity. They are the least interesting and the...
– Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak
I often see many South Asian Americans on social media platforms attempt (often uncritically) to claim forms of victimhood. This quote (though specifically related to the most extreme forms of marginality) speaks well to the frustrations I feel when I see people casually...
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