Posts Tagged ‘william shakespeare’
[BLOG] Some Sunday links
- Architectuul looks at the Porto architectural project Critical Concrete, here.
- Bad Astronomer Phil Plait shares the evidence for our galaxy having experienced a phase as a quasar a quarter-million years long some 3.5 million years ago.
- Author James Bow celebrates the end of his publicity tour for The Night Girl, including a controversy over cover art featuring the CN Tower.
- Robert Zubrin at Centauri Dreams considers how we could detect energy from artificial singularities used for power and propulsion. (Is this how we find the Romulans?)
- The Crux considers whether or not the new proposals for more powerful supercolliders in China and Europe are likely to produce new discoveries.
- D-Brief explains why older generations so often look down on the young: The elders idealize their younger selves too much.
- Dead Things notes new evidence, in the tracks of trilobites moving in line 480 million years ago, for early life being able to engage in collective behaviour.
- io9 interviews Kami Garcia about her new YA book featuring venerable DC character Raven, remaking her for new readers.
- The Island Review interviews David Gange about The Frayed Atlantic Edge, his book account of his kayak trip down the western coasts of Britain and Ireland.
- JSTOR Daily explains why Martin Luther King Jr. thought so highly of jazz.
- Eleanor Penny argues at the LRB Blog against taking Malthus, with his pessimism trending towards a murderous misanthropy, as a prophet for our times.
- The NYR Daily looks at the play American Moor, which touches on the efforts of black actors to engage with Shakespeare.
- Drew Rowsome reviews the new film The Flick, an old to old-style movies and theatres.
- The Russian Demographics Blog shares a map depicting Hutterite migrations across early modern Europe.
- Starts With A Bang shares new speculation that some evidence for dark matter might actually be a mistake in measurement.
- Strange Maps notes the now mostly submerged continent of Greater Adria.
- Window on Eurasia shares a suggestion that the deep Russophilia of many ordinary people in Belarus might support union with Russia.
- Arnold Zwicky looks at the different meanings of “unaccompanied”.
Written by Randy McDonald
October 20, 2019 at 7:15 pm
Posted in Assorted, Demographics, Economics, History, Politics, Popular Culture, Science, Social Sciences
Tagged with african-americans, architecture, astronomy, belarus, black holes, britain, china, dc comics, Demographics, earth, english language, european union, evolution, extraterrestrial intelligence, ireland, islands, jazz, links, malthus. hutterites, maps, migration, national identity, physics, popular culture, popular literature, popular music, portugal, quasars, russia, Sagittarius A*, singularity, social sciences, sociology, space science, technology, theatre, travel, trilobites, united states, william shakespeare
[NEWS] Five LGBTQ links: Old West, William Shakespeare, The Emerald City, HIV in military, racism
- JSTOR Daily took a look at the gender non-conformists of the Old West of the United States.
- Last month, Sky Gilbert at The Conversation took a look at the many queer themes in the plays of William Shakespeare.
- Mike Miksche reports for NewNowNext on The Emerald City, a public access television show in the mid-1970s that was the first queer show on television.
- Queerty reports that the Trump Administration is now attempting to force HIV-positive soldiers out of the American military.
- At Them, Phillip Henry makes the point that racism is not a preference.
Written by Randy McDonald
July 24, 2018 at 6:45 pm
Posted in Assorted, Demographics, History, Popular Culture, Social Sciences
Tagged with gender, glbt issues, history, hiv/aids, links, military, news, popular culture, racism, sexuality, shakespeare, sociology, television, theatre, united states, william shakespeare