Posts tagged Guernica
Posts tagged Guernica
As narcotraficantes terrorize Mexico with surreal acts of violence, it’s time to reconsider our basic assumptions about the U.S. War on Drugs.
Guernica mag || July 11, 2012
Today’s art world, like the realm of finance, is a place of stock and shareholders.
Can Liberia’s celebrated president win the trust of her people?
Guernica || May 1, 2012
On riots and race. What has changed, and what’s still bubbling under the surface, 20 years after the riots in South Central Los Angeles:
The L.A. Riots (or uprising, civil unrest, or rebellion, depending) are often considered the first ‘multiethnic’ riots. As a pivot point of race and urban relations, they constitute a resonant moment for immigrant America. Korean Americans living on the West Coast at the time remember the first day, 4-29, or sa-i-gu, with time-freezing clarity.
For many of us, the riots were a schooling in color and class. Our household, run by two working-class parents, was consumed by frantic arguments and phone calls about race, cities, and the distribution of wealth. There was talk of structural, large-scale discrimination, not merely individual prejudice or circumstance, which shaped the course of my life. Last summer, approaching the riots’ twentieth anniversary, I sought out the lessons of 1992. I was drawn in particular to the riots’ crucible in South Central, since refashioned as ‘South L.A.,’ though its infamy and boundaries–set by highways and thoroughfares–remain unchanged.
“South L.A., Twenty Years Later.” — E. Tammy Kim, Guernica Magazine
(via longreads)
New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman’s metaphorical pile-ups, hollow analyses, and factual inaccuracies have garnered him three Pulitzer Prizes, and frighteningly unchecked power.
Guernica || December 2011
On a mother’s embrace of the teachings of 1970s self-help guru Warner Erhard.
Guernica || November 2011
An American living in Cuba discovers Havana’s black-market epicurean scene.
Guernica || August 2011
The Story of O shocked readers worldwide with its sadomasochistic love affair written in a style “too direct, too cool, to be that of a woman.”
Guernica || June 2011
“Nobody would gasp if they heard a fifteen or sixteen year-old had lost her virginity. The clock was ticking.”
Guernica || June 2011
Elected in 2009, leftist Mauricio Funes became the first Salvadoran president to apologize for government death squads. Dara Kerr investigates the massacre and subsequent cover-up, the U.S. role in the killings, and the backdrop for an unprecedented apology.
Guernica || May 2011