Out of Jail and Homeless

City struggles to stop COVID-19’s spread among New York’s recently released prisoners

Stefan Outlaw had just recovered from the worst of his COVID-19 symptoms when he learned that a charitable fund had paid to bail him out of the Rikers Island jail. It was mid-March, and much of the jail population was quarantined in cells for 24 hours a day. Outlaw, age ...
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Out of Jail and Homeless

Meatpacking Plants and the Defense Production Act

Past Present, Episode 227

Here are some links and references mentioned during this week’s show: President Trump has used the Defense Production Act to order meatpacking plants to stay open, even as these factories have become hotspots for coronavirus infection. Niki commented on how Upton Sinclair’s classic novel, The Jungle, exposed the horrible ...
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The Age of Infection

Is life turning against itself?

In the age of infection, the goal of human existence is to become a virus -- to have a Tweet or TikTok infect the cells of the cultural body, cutting through the cacophony, so that others might finally see me, and acknowledge that my existence matters (even if that “existence” ...
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The Age of Infection

A Spiritual Month in the Cloud

Virtual Seder, makeshift matzoh, and finding joy amidst grief

The Cloud this April hums with virtual Seders, virtual Easters, virtual gatherings for the breaking of the Ramadan fast. Jews world over subtract from their full glass of wine the ritual drops signifying the ten plagues suffered by the Egyptians when they would not release us from servitude. Dom: water becomes blood Tzfardeyah: frogs overrun ...
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A Spiritual Month in the Cloud

The World Is Absolutely Full of Wonder

An interview with Mary Ruefle

In Dunce, Mary Ruefle examines death, endings, and our relationship to the everyday objects and rituals that remind us, even while they provide comfort and solace, of the fundamental frailty and uncertainty of life. We spoke recently by phone (the “Contact” section of Ruefle’s website states, wonderfully, that she does not own a computer and that ...
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The World Is Absolutely Full of Wonder

The Rebirth of Tragedy

We are all existentialists now, knowing only that we must try to carry on

Today we find ourselves in the midst of another great calamity. Once again we are compelled to ask whether our rational faculties are capable of coping with a virus about which we know far too little. The measures we think we need to take to keep untold numbers from dying are themselves so painful ...
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The Rebirth of Tragedy

Hong Kong Under Lockdown

From the masks of protesters to the mask of public health

The mask ban, based on a century-old colonial emergency ordinance, was largely upheld earlier this month in a controversial ruling by Hong Kong’s Court of Final Appeal. By then, the Covid-19 crisis had stopped the mass protests, accomplishing what Carrie Lam and her officers could not during much of 2019. ...
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Hong Kong Under Lockdown

The Meaning(s) of Medical Masks

Hygiene, fashion, solidarity — and care

It is startling to see the ways in which medical masks have taken on a multiplicity of meanings: They were initially objects of confusion (to wear, or not to wear?), they have been in short supply -- and now, in many states, citizens by law must wear them in public. ...
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The Meaning(s) of Medical Masks

COVID-19 Paused Family Reunification Cases

They’re resuming, but at what pace?

Abigail Kramer is a senior editor at the Center for New York City Affairs at The New School. She specializes in policy issues impacting low-income children, youth, and families in New York City—especially those in the foster care and juvenile justice systems.
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COVID-19 Paused Family Reunification Cases

Evoking Artist As Mother

An Interview With Myla Goldberg

Hayleigh Santra [HS]: How did you come up with the idea for Feast Your Eyes? Myla Goldberg [MG]: For me, the book started with a question: Is it possible to be both an excellent artist and an excellent parent, or to be one of those, do you have to kick the ...
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Evoking Artist As Mother

In Limbo

My journey through the pandemic

That is how my personal journey through the pandemic began. I was spending the academic year in New York City on a Fulbright scholarship at The New School. After living in the city all fall and winter, my wife and I were planning to leave at the end of April. ...
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In Limbo