Etienne Tshisekedi's Death in Life and Life in Death!
In: The Zambakari Advisory, June 2017
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In: The Zambakari Advisory, June 2017
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In a democracy, journalists are expected to safeguard the public interest and to provide truth and accountability to citizens. The media should not function as a megaphone for someone else's agenda. It is meant to have an active place in society. But the career span of an investigative reporter is relatively short, and maintaining the freedom from censorship, in Sean Holman's case at least, means going it alone as a freelancer. Unfortunately, the rise and fall of Public Eye demonstrates that independent investigative journalism is not a sustainable practice in Canada. Times Colonist reporter Lindsay Kines shares Holman's convictions regarding the media's watchdog function. To do good investigative reporting a journalist needs at least three to four months to focus on a story. But that is not good business – a lesson that Holman learned the hard way after receiving only $500 for his 2004 Jack Webster Award-winning five-month investigation into what became known as the Doug Walls affair.
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In: Georgia State University Law Review, Band 28, Heft 4
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In: Food and foodways: explorations in the history & culture of human nourishment, Band 8, Heft 4, S. 227-252
ISSN: 1542-3484
In this illuminating collection of oral-history style interviews, Casey Jarman talks to a funeral industry watchdog about the (often shady) history of the death trade; he hears how songwriter David Bazan lost his faith while trying to hold on to his family; he learns about cartoonist Art Spiegelman using his college LSD trips to explain death to his children; and he gets to know his own grandparents, posthumously. These are stories of loss, rebuilding, wonder, and wild speculation featuring everyone from philosophers to former death row wardens and hospice volunteers. In these moving, enlightening, and often funny conversations, the end is only the beginning.
In: Journal of church and state: JCS, Band 47, Heft 4, S. 897
ISSN: 0021-969X
Evans reviews The Death of Kings: Royal Deaths in Medieval England by Michael Evans.
"In the fall of 2017, the acclaimed writer and musician Vivek Shraya began receiving vivid and disturbing transphobic hate mail from a stranger. Celebrated artist Ness Lee brings these letters and Shraya's responses to them to startling life in "Death Threat", a comic book that, by its existence, becomes a compelling act of resistance. Using satire and surrealism, "Death Threat" is an unflinching portrayal of violent harassment from the perspective of both the perpetrator and the target, illustrating the dangers of online accessibility, and the ease with which vitriolic hatred can be spread digitally."--
In: GLQ: a journal of lesbian and gay studies, Band 18, Heft 4, S. 597-614
ISSN: 1527-9375
This essay aims to give an overview of Hong Kong queer media productions by presenting specific media representations that speak to local queer sensibilities and sexual politics. I investigate the nature of a localized queer nonchalance that cultivates an environment readable as both tolerant and limiting of queer desires, as well as resistant of the rumors of a broader cultural death. One of the case studies includes, to use Helen Hok-Sze Leung's term, "do-it-yourself" queer cultural projects that focus on reaching out to LGBT communities rather than to a wider mainstream public reception. Another example involves gender-crossing performances and cultural productions from mainstream media icons in popular culture. Finally, I discuss gossip magazine coverage of queer celebrity rumors. I locate my concerns in questioning whether mass-media practices can perversely normalize same-sex sexuality in our everyday lives.
"We are like an admirable, wandering Numancia, who prefers to die gradually than to admit defeat" (translated from Alfonso Guerra's documentary, Exilio). Uttered during the fall of the Republican government during the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939), Spanish author Luis Araquistáin's ominous phrase not only speaks to the slow death of Republican hopes while in exile, but also hearkens back to a small town in the north of Spain that existed in the second century AD. Famed for its resistance to the advancing Roman armies, Numantia fell in 133 BC to Scipio Aemilianus who led the forces of the Roman Empire against the city and besieged it for eight months. Yet, even as late as the twentieth century in Spain, people could still hear references being made to this small town; the preservation of the memory of Numantia is largely due to the work of Miguel de Cervantes, who in the 1580s penned El cerco de Numancia (or simply, La destrucción de Numancia), a play based on the events of 133 BC. After Cervantes came multiple playwrights, poets, and even politicians who reinterpreted the play in various forms to communicate distinct messages. One of the most unique moments in the life of Cervantes' El cerco de Numancia came during the Spanish Civil War; during this clash between visions of the future of Spain, both Republican forces and the Nacionales of Franco utilized the image of Numantia to motivate their constituents and sway others to their cause.
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Death is the inevitable fate of every single person on earth. How do we accept the inevitability of our own death? How do we live our lives with meaning? Will money lead us to happiness? Satish Modi examines these questions is a moving, powerful, thought-provoking work based on his own reflections as well as the experiences of people from all walks of life. The result is a fascinating book that teaches us that whoever we are and whatever our aspirations in this life, it is important for each and every one of us to accept our own passing. In doing so we can free ourselves to live as well and fu
In: Index on censorship, Band 31, Heft 4, S. 24-105
ISSN: 0306-4220
Explores physical and metaphorical forms of death; war, death penalty, abortion, euthanasia, dead languages, failed nations, HIV/AIDS, and other issues; 14 articles. Contents: "If all else fail...": there is a world of difference between death and dying, by AC Grayling; Forces of life and death: how to reconcile the right to life with the death penalty, by Mary Kenny; Controversial cross-section: art, anatomy or merely pornographic? by Natasha Schmidt; Sex, lies and censorship: why it took so long for the US paedophile priests scandal to hit the headlines, by Carl M. Cannon; The epic that will not die: Romania clings to its apparatchiks, by Irena Maryniak; The unquiet grave: the disputed graveyards of Eastern Europe, by Vera Rich; The house of burned books: book burning turns out to be a universally enjoyed phenomenon, by Stacy Marking; Holding on to Babel: what happens when a language dies, by Helena Drysdale; Death of a nation: can Sierra Leone claim any longer to be a functioning state? by Aminatta Forna; Women and war: when women become military targets, by Victoria Brittain; Fucking soldiers: how armies spread AIDS in Africa, by Alex de Waal; Price of a life--or death: and the cost of the inquiry into the Bloody Sunday killings; Holding on to a dream: hope dies as Palestinians await the return journey, by Caroline Moorehead; Strip search, by Martin Rowson.
Thinking about death -- The nature of death -- Physical disintegration -- Psychological disintegration -- Reincarnation -- Resurrection -- Medical immortality -- Digital immortality -- An existential phenomenon of life -- The value of death -- Bad or good -- To be feared or not -- To be grieved and how -- The choice of death -- To be hastened or not : the case of suicide -- To be hastened or not : the case of treatment refusal -- To be hastened or not: the case of physician-assisted suicide -- The lessons of death -- A window into life -- Glossary of philosophical terms -- References.