The work that begins at retirement
Life's later decades present distinctive virtues—and vices.
Life's later decades present distinctive virtues—and vices.
Most of us only know the pro-life movement after Roe v. Wade. But there's a fuller history—with surprising turns.
Yaa Gyasi's novel reveals the freedoms and captivities we all inherit.
Pope Francis's theology of mercy has political implications.
How we define ourselves and others is complex because we hold multiple identities simultaneously. Social contexts and the resulting power relations (racism, sexism, classism, etc.) “are intertwined and mutually constructing.” This book portrays intersectionality as not only an analytic tool used by scholars but also a performative concept—it accomplishes as well as describes. In other words, it is both theory and practice. From the protests around the 2014 FIFA World Cup to “cyberfeminist debates” to hip hop, the authors vividly illustrate how intersectionality shapes people’s lives.
It's odd the way this volume deals with Barack Obama. It's a shame it has to deal with David Barton at all.
This “best of” volume contains an impressive array of spiritual writing. Its essays, all of which have been published in Portland Magazine since 2003, give readers a glimpse into the aesthetic and theological sensibilities of editor Brian Doyle. More important, they model how to write well about faith, doubt, trauma, grace, sin, death, and beauty. From Mary Gordon to Edward Hoagland, Cynthia Ozick to Thomas Lynch, these authors set forth equal measures of realism and hope. As Alice Lok Cahana, an Auschwitz survivor, explains, “God says to us, . . .
Teenage girls navigate a tough landscape. There are tools the church can offer them.
How can God speak through what is soft and breakable? How can we?
Caregiving is a form of love rooted in relationship, not a form of work. So argues Alison Gopnik, who teaches at the University of California, Berkeley, and is known for her research on the psychology of children. Drawing upon neuroscience, philosophy, and social psychology, Gopnik shows how “the parenting model” (aimed at producing a particular type of child, as a carpenter produces a chair) often fails to engage the plastic minds of young children.