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May 17, 2012 By Kate Robinson from InContext
May 16, 2012 By Marina DelVecchio from InContext
May 15, 2012 By Cathy Fitzgerald from Eco Art Notebook

May 15, 2012 By Anuja Seith
In her book Exhibiting Blackness, Bridget R. Cooks, associate professor in the School of Humanities at UC Irvine, analyzes the curatorial strategies, challenges, and public and critical receptions of the most significant exhibitions of African American art and culture in American art museums.

January 3, 2012 By Lourdes Acevedo
It is hard not to believe we’re in a time of empowerment of those less powerful, and to be swept up in the fervor escalating the world over. In 2011, we witnessed the Arab Spring, the Occupy Wall Street protests and most recently, one of the largest protests of women in Egypt’s long history against the [...]

February 15, 2012 By Melissa Corliss Delorenzo
Her Circle takes a close look at the International Museum of Women and its efforts to promote, support and curate the art of women from around the globe: “Although women in the Western world continue to struggle for purchase in the artistic realm, in other parts of the world voices go completely unheard—are entirely silenced. There is no outlet for them. Here is where the International Museum of Women seeks to fill the gaps and build bridges….”

February 1, 2012 By Heather Child
Heather Child looks at roles for female characters in Disney-Pixar’s latest creations and asks, “Why are films with their feet firmly in the twenty-first century still struggling with something as basic as gender representation?

May 1, 2012 By MaryAnne Kolton
In her latest novel, Carol Anshaw presents us with a sizable group of friends, and an unforgiveable accident. She ensnares us and them in a net of gut-wrenching guilt, twisted families, fierce addictions, love, lust and everyday life. Carry the One then proceeds to lure us into closely following these people for thirty years. MaryAnne Kolton speaks to the novelist in this UpClose interview.

from Main, UpClose Interview
Dutch artist Elis Vermuelen’s Global Burrows Project is an exploration of the places we inhabit and what we leave behind. From the beaches of the Netherlands to a disused house in the American Midwest, Vermuelen’s two-year journey opens a window onto our relationships with ourselves, each other, and our surroundings.

May 15, 2012 from Podcasts
Colombian writer of creative non-fiction, Adriana Pàramo reads from her recently published book Looking for Esperanza, which won the Social Justice and Equality Award in Creative Nonfiction in 2011, and discusses the issues raised in the book with Claire Hart.

May 1, 2012 By Cathy Fitzgerald from Eco Art Notebook
Eco Arts Notebook examines Polly Higgins, author of Eradicating Ecocide—exposing the corporate and political practices destroying the planet and proposing the laws needed to eradicate ecocide, and her work with exposing the world to the idea and concerns about Ecocide.
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One World Café presents A…: Colombian writer of creative non-fiction, Adriana Pàramo reads from her rec...
Anti-Feminist Ideals in <…: Marina DelVecchio analyzes the dangers supported by author E.L. James in he...
The New Domestic: A Conte…: Her Circle Ezine takes a look at the new domesticity that is surfacing—one ...
Drawing Closer: Women Poe…: Alexa Mergen explores women poets and the nature poem: "As women and as poe...
Alice Walker and Zora Nea…:
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[...] “I also really like the metaphor of the spiral, the whirlpool, the way it is part of a river but yet an entity of its own. When conditions are right, it forms. When conditions are not, it simply returns to the river. It was of the river, part of the river, all along.” View Image Gallery [...]