Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

Search results for

  • Thursday, March 14, 2024 at 8 p.m. on KPBS 2 / Stream the series now with KPBS Passport! On Nov. 9, 1989 the most solid symbol of the Cold War, The Berlin Wall which had divided the city for almost thirty years, was knocked down. The Soviet Union begins to come apart. The 100 days that surrounded this symbolic event changed our world; to some it seemed to have come out of a clear blue sky. But had it?
  • San Diego Theatres is proud to present the farewell performances of Hershey Felder as George Gershwin Alone! George Gershwin Alone tells the story of America’s great composer, who with the groundbreaking Rhapsody in Blue, made a “Lady out of Jazz.” After over 3000 performances in more than 100 venues worldwide, from Broadway to South Korea and points in between, these will be the final performances of Hershey Felder as George Gershwin Alone. Audiences will be enchanted as Mr. Felder brings to life the spirit and talent of the legendary composer and pianist, including a finale where the audience can join the artist and sing Gershwin’s greatest hits. Stay Connected on Social Media! Facebook | Instagram | Twitter
  • This illuminating essay uses film scenes to tell of the forced cultural appropriation of a world-famous landscape. Monument Valley is one of the most recognizable landscapes in the world. Its iconographic use in American Westerns has had a lasting influence on stock photography, advertising, and tourism. The valley has been given mythical significance as an image of a “primitive West” firmly in the hands of white people and meant to be protected from intruders. The fact that Monument Valley is traditional Navajo territory has been obscured in the process. A radical examination of Monument Valley’s representation in cinema and advertising since John Ford’s Stagecoach (1939), The Taking scrutinizes how a site located on sovereign Navajo land came to embody the fantasy of the “Old West,” replete with self-perpetuating falsehoods, and why it continues to hold mythic significance in the global psyche.
  • California has expanded voting access and participation, but that can delay election results. Are there ways to count votes faster without undermining election security?
  • The rapper was convicted of shooting Megan Thee Stallion in July 2020 as they left a party in Los Angeles. Prosecutors argued that Tory Lanez had tried to turn public opinion against the victim.
  • Mountain West Commissioner Gloria Nevarez has announced that San Diego State will remain in the conference, at least for now.
  • Having this virus is bad enough at home, where you might spend hours hugging the toilet. Imagine having it out camping. Investigators wanted to find out how backpackers were getting and spreading it.
  • Class Description This class for all genders who identify as a warrior, or who are trying to find the Muse warrior inside, is for beginning or seasoned poets. The native “respect” is a noun which weaves through identities, male, female, two-spirited, more: Indian women performed what Europeans considered to be men’s work. But, from the Native American perspective, women’s roles reflected their own cultural emphases on reciprocity, balance, and autonomy. Most scholars agree that Native American women at the time of contact with Europeans had more authority and autonomy than did European women…However, most cultures shared certain characteristics that promoted gender equality. Two quotes by Joy Harjo, the first Native American Poet Laureate of our nation, help form our perspective in this respect. The first quote is: Poetry is the art that is closest to music, standing between music and narrative orality (which can be speechmaking, sermon or theater). Poetry is the voice of what can’t be spoken, the mode of truth-telling when meaning needs to rise above or skim below everyday language in shapes not discernible by the ordinary mind. It trumps the rhetoric of politicians. Poetry is prophetic by nature and not bound by time. Because of these qualities poetry carries grief, heartache, ecstasy, celebration, despair, or searing truth more directly than any other literary art form. It is ceremonial in nature. Poetry is a tool for disruption and creation and is necessary for generations of humans to know who they are and who they are becoming in the wave map of history. Without poetry, we lose our way. — On the art of poetry in “An Interview with Joy Harjo, U.S. Poet Laureate” in Poets.org (2019 Mar 31) The second quote is: I am seen as a feminist poet. The way I interpret feminism in my own work is the power of a woman to be a warrior—to recognize the warrior characteristics within herself, which include self-love, vulnerability, honesty, integrity, a sense of morals, and so on…Part of the way I am comes from being around Native American people, but I wouldn’t really use the world ‘spiritual.’ It is natural for human beings to be in awe of the sacred and to realize that the sacred is everywhere. But humans seem to have lost their way, although every once in a while someone may find it, and I think that’s the artist. The artists and the poets are the ones who search for the sacred place. — On finding ways to honor women in “Joy Harjo: An Interview” in Poets & Writers (July/August 1993) How do we define what poetry is for us, what the process is about, not the event, as we put pen to page or tap the keyboard. And what is the role of the poet holding the pen? Traditionally, the warrior is seen as a man. Joy Harjo’s above definition expands the gender possibilities for the warrior’s identity when such terms as self-love, vulnerability (being receptive to themes, images, stories), honesty, integrity, etc. Harjo: Most readers assume that the events in a poem actually happened to the poet. Not everything I write is autobiographical. In my work, I add to or change the truth. It is still the truth, just presented in a different form…If my style didn’t change and evolve, I would quit writing. Poetry is reciprocal. As poetry feeds you, you have to nurture the art and give it time and attention. It does give back to you, I suppose like anything else (Ibid). Participants in this class will hear poems by Joy Harjo, Georgiana Valoyce Sanchez, Louise Erdrich, N. Scott Momaday, Jimmy Santiago Baca, Sherwin Bitsui, Sherman Alexie, Kim Shuck, and others. These poets will help the above definitions in concrete, figurative, and indigenous ways. Film clips will also help you in your search to define your warrior or feel like one. Jim Moreno’s poem-making workshop will be taught on Sunday, March 26, 2023, online in his Zoom meeting room. Participants in the class are welcomed to the Container of respect and safety that are the staples of Moreno’s classes. The first 90-minute segment will include Native women poets, film clips, and poems. The second 90 minutes will feature Native men poets, film clips and poems. Disclaimers You will be emailed the Zoom link 24 hours before the start of the class. If you sign up less than 24 hours before the start of the class, please either send us a message via this website or send an email to request your link. Please note that it is best to register at least a week before the start of a class to help our instructors prepare and ensure that a class does not get canceled or rescheduled. Policies on registration, refunds, cancellations, etc. can be found on our policies page. If you would like to provide feedback regarding this class, please feel free to complete an evaluation form. Stay Connected on Social Media! Facebook | Instagram | Twitter
  • Forget ChatGPT- Come chat furrreal and try to spot some wild creatures hiding around San Diego! We may have been hearing about the tech changes coming our way, from social media lawsuits to the implications for chatbots like ChatGPT. In these wild and wacky times, the Unplug Collaborative encourages people to still make time to chat with REAL people, IN person, and in REAL time. America’s Finest City is becoming America’s best city to unplug as we join the 14th annual Global (formerly National) Day of Unplugging with many fun activities happening around town from March 3-4. Wild creatures will be hiding out in restaurants, businesses and scavenger hunts from La Mesa to Julian. San Diegans can try to spot the furry creatures in La Mesa and at various other locations (Mom's Pies and Fort Cross in Wynola, Regulars Wanted in Julian, Rancho Guejito vineyard in Escondido). They can take a nature hike at Dictionary Hill in Spring Valley or San Dieguito County Park, take a mandala rock painting class in Coronado or step into a sound bath for deep relaxation in Crown Point. Check out www.unplugcollaborative.org/unplugged-cities/san-diego-ca for San Diego event details. Check out the Nocturnals Scavenger Hunt in La Mesa Village - Saturday March 4 (11 a.m. - 1 p.m.) and look for Student art from La Mesa Middle Arts Academy on display in shop windows. See if you can find Sleepy the Sloth, Rocky Raccoon and all his night-time friends, along with clues. Turn in your completed sheet to SurfRider Pizza by days end and get a free SmartPhone Nap-Sack (while supplies last) and enter to win raffle prizes donated by local businesses. ABOUT US: The Unplug Collaborative-home to Global Day of Unplugging, is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit providing resources to communities elevating human connection over digital engagement by planning fun and meaningful events! Since 2009, 140,000+ people in over 12 countries have participated, and whether it's 1 hour or 24, at some point during the first weekend of March, thousands of people will step away from their screens and intentionally shift into an offline activity, or a real-life gathering. The other 364 days a year the UC helps people who want to do more, build an Unplugged Village® in their community. Check out our 200+ ideas to unplug any time of the year at www.unplugcollaborative.org!
  • In an NPR Politics Podcast interview, the North Dakota governor shares his views on wide-ranging issues, including the role of the federal government in regulating abortion and transgender issues.
808 of 3,979