Brazilian modernist multimedia artist Roberto Burle Marx was born #OTD in 1909. Burle Marx highlighted indigenous plants in his bold landscape designs & spoke out about deforestation. Read @TomCGardens on Burle Marx's celebration of botanical biodiversity: https://t.co/Qi0hdyqitQ
"The writers in these circumstances—for the most part in the Donbas region—try to find the words for war." Steve Moyer situates the power of current Ukrainian poetry to name & bear witness to tragedy within a decades-long tradition. Read more here: https://t.co/Cech0z4vU2
"Astonished that they were now asked to develop the Navajo language to aid the war effort, the Navajo soldiers created the code in only a few months."
@LauraTohe on the heroism of Navajo code talkers despite centuries of violent erasure & assimilation: https://t.co/OiYK9TjpNu
#Writer Willa Cather was born #OTD 1873 in Gore, VA. Cather’s time in the Arizona desert inspired key scenes in her 1915 novel, “The Song of the Lark.” Learn more in this @humanitiesmag article by @mathitak: https://t.co/vlsY5S8YL2
"In time, the trio succeeded where newspaper reporters often failed: Making their way into the homes and lives of close-knit communities not known for letting their guard down.” Learn more from Rafael Alvarez: https://t.co/5SIrcwU08T
“Within a few years, however, the French Revolution would also show that crowds could be dangerous, even to governments that claimed to represent the will of the people.” Jeremy Popkin explores crowds in the French Revolution here: https://t.co/X5ROh55rlA
Explore the connections between Black capitalism and McDonald’s in this new interview with @DrMChatelain, author of @PulitzerPrizes winner “Franchise: The Golden Arches in Black America”: https://t.co/9nI4t7DT4t
“... the garment’s purpose was to protect the wearer by concealing his or her identity...” @hstamler dives into Nick Cave’s “Soundsuit” in her @humanitiesmag debut: https://t.co/lqGgDLUPFq
“Part of the legacy of the Negro leagues is that the variegated businesses and partnerships developed despite isolation from mainstream culture and the obstruction of economic and political gains.” Read more in Drew D. Brown & Thabiti Lewis’s new article: https://t.co/RcyW5A5cSo
American revivalist preacher Jonathan Edwards was born #OTD 1703. Marilynne Robinson looks at Edwards and the Great Awakening here: https://t.co/qQ6aVOidTE