The blogging and online publication world seems to slow During Christmas week, and that’s a good thing, I think. I noticed an uptick in poetry, though, and that’s a good thing, too. And this week we have an array of poems and articles about poets, from a story about how poet Dana Gioia saved reading to a poem from the late 15thcentury from a manuscript of carols.
The growing volume of articles about higher education cracking up seems to indicate something of a growth industry. Joshua Herring writes about whether the liberal arts will survive in this century (a response to a bad defense of a good thing); while even evangelical Christian Wheaton College has discovered that an outside speaker has allegedly triggered students’ feelings about being “unsafe.”
Here’s a question: what do you think soldiers (on both sides) would have read during the American Civil War? Sarah Kay Bierle at Emerging Civil War has an answer (a bit of a surprise).
Happy New Year!
More Good Reads
Poetry
Poetry? What Is It Good For? – Nayeli Riano at The Imaginative Conservative.
Annie (or Great Aunt Margaret’s Birth) – Joe Spring.
The Circle Dance – Malcolm Guite at An Unexpected Journal.
I never said – Robert Rife at Rob’s Lit-Bits.
Life and Culture
How to Change the World in 2019: Build Community – Zak Schmoll at Entering the Public Square.
Faith
Why in 2019 The Tide For Evangelism Might Just Turn – Stephen McAlpine.
Top 10 News Stories from 2018 – Lifeway Facts & Trends.
Between – Paul Phillips at He’s Taken Leave.
Writing and Literature
Why We Love to Visit Narnia – Louis Markos at An Unexpected Journal.
Charles Dickens’s great expectations about his attire – Maev Kennedy at The Art Newspaper.
Art and Photography
Snow Trail – Tim Good via Facebook.
Matt Maher – Let There Be Peace
No comments:
Post a Comment