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This week on nybooks.com: How American Jews isolate themselves
from Palestinian perspectives, Seamus Heaney as a teacher, Edward
Snowden in Russia, America’s unemployed young people, why Obama can’t go
it alone in Syria, cat people on Mars, Syrian refugees in Kurdistan,
Berlusconi’s threat, Questlove’s memoir, L.S. Lowry’s landscapes, and a
tribute to Isaiah Berlin, Stuart Hampshire, and Bernard Williams.
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The American Jewish CocoonPeter Beinart
“Who is wise?” asks the Jewish ethical text Pirkei Avot. “He
who learns from all people.” As Jews, we owe Israel not merely our
devotion but our wisdom. And we can’t truly provide it if our isolation
from Palestinians keeps us dumb.
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What Seamus Heaney Taught MeChristopher Benfey
Seamus Heaney used to say that the poetry-writing hours of a poet’s day
were the easy part; it was what to do with the rest of the day that was
a challenge. He decided early on that teaching was something honorable
to do with the rest of the day. He took his teaching very seriously,
regarding it as a craft, something to be worked at, much like writing.
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Snowden in ExileAmy Knight
Over the summer, there has been much debate about whether Edward
Snowden is a courageous whistleblower or a traitor. Even if he started
out closer to the former, his protection by the Russians may
increasingly make him appear a defector who fled one country in order to
serve another. Kim Philby’s treatment after his defection to Russia
fifty years ago does not bode well for what Snowden might expect in
Moscow.
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America’s Jobless GenerationJeff Madrick
Our current employment crisis has less to do with technology or
globalization than with the administration’s failure to adopt policies
to support young workers.
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Holding Italy HostageTim Parks
Vote me out of jail, or I will bring the country down with me. This,
essentially, is the message Silvio Berlusconi has sent to the Italian
government.
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China: When the Cats RuleIan Johnson
Lao She’s Cat Country is one of the most remarkable,
perplexing, and prophetic novels of modern China. On one level it is a
work of science fiction—a visit to a country of cat-like people on
Mars—that lampoons 1930s China. On a deeper level, the work predicts the
terror and violence of the early Communist era and the chaos and
brutality that led to Lao She’s death.
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Syria’s Kurdish WarHugh Eakin
Is northern Iraq being drawn into the Syrian war? Iraqi Kurdistan has
received one of the largest waves of refugees since the Syrian conflict
began three years ago—40,000 people in less than two weeks, overwhelming
the regional government and straining Kurdish unity.
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Obama, Syria & the ConstitutionDavid Cole
Whatever the validity of a military intervention in Syria under
international law, under the US Constitution only Congress has the
authority to authorize military force.
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Questlove’s Outward BluesJames Guida
Mo’ Meta Blues is a hip hop memoir, a now distinct genre
within America’s wider memoir boom. But Questlove’s book is the first
not by a rapper, and that is just one way that it stands out.
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The Art of L.S. Lowry |
Philosophy as a Humanist Discipline | |||||||




