29 September 2004 Daily Links
“‘In a sense we’ve been having Sukkot the last two weeks!’” Florida Jews experience a more literal celebration of Sukkot, a holiday that traditionally calls on them to dwell in Continue Reading →
a review of religion and media
“‘In a sense we’ve been having Sukkot the last two weeks!’” Florida Jews experience a more literal celebration of Sukkot, a holiday that traditionally calls on them to dwell in Continue Reading →
America finds a new all-purpose metaphor for discontent. By Kathryn Joyce Pat Buchanan sees the dusty ghost of the Roman Empire reincarnating itself in America today, and fears that it’s Continue Reading →
America finds a new all-purpose metaphor for discontent. By Kathryn Joyce Pat Buchanan sees the dusty ghost of the Roman Empire reincarnating itself in America today, and fears that it’s Continue Reading →
Notes from Dr. Armand Nicholi’s militant past. By Jeff Sharlet PBS’s latest God offering — “The Question of God,” blogged below — will no doubt be a well-researched program centered around the Continue Reading →
Notes from Dr. Armand Nicholi’s militant past. By Jeff Sharlet PBS’s latest God offering — “The Question of God,” blogged below — will no doubt be a well-researched program centered around the Continue Reading →
Notes from Dr. Armand Nicholi’s militant past. By Jeff Sharlet PBS’s latest God offering — “The Question of God,” blogged below — will no doubt be a well-researched program centered around the Continue Reading →
“If Kerry Wins…“: Dick Cheney opts for equal opportunity voter intimidation. “‘Thank you, Lord, for loving journalism’”: Columbia Journalism Review’s Gal Beckerman writes a fine and nuanced report on the World Journalism Institute, a Continue Reading →
Since when is the press this polite? by Kathryn Joyce All of the usual mud was thrown, partisan guns drawn and pseudo-“larger questions” raised after the Deal Hudson scandal broke Continue Reading →
Hamodia, America’s only English-language Jewish daily, was conceived as an antidote to mainstream press. For Stephen Vider, writing at Nextbook, it seemed like an opening into an insular world. Instead, he found Continue Reading →
Blogging from Baghdad: “I always love passing by the churches. It gives me a momentary sense that everything must be right in the world to see them standing lovely and Continue Reading →