Whatever happened to Maria?
How did the remainder of her life play out after Tony, the young white man she wanted, was shot dead by her fellow Puerto Rican-American Chino at the end of "West Side Story?" Maria, readers will recall, got the gun after Chino dropped it and threatened to use it to kill both others and herself, but couldn't pull the trigger. So there she was, still alive when the final curtain came down.
Saturday, June 29, 2019
Thursday, June 13, 2019
Arthur Miller's "All My Sons" Remains Relevant
The on-line version of The Wall Street Journal recently posed a question for readers: should startup technology companies in the U.S. be open to financing by Chinese venture capital?
Those responding must follow WSJ civility guidelines and identify themselves. The paper then publishes a few answers soon after a question has been posed.
Those responding must follow WSJ civility guidelines and identify themselves. The paper then publishes a few answers soon after a question has been posed.
Tuesday, June 11, 2019
Vulnerable Women and "What the Constitution Means to Me"
I was recently in New York and, among other things, saw a much-discussed play on Broadway entitled "What the Constitution Means to Me."
In truth, it is more of a one-woman monologue than a play, although at the end, there is a brief debate between Heidi Schreck, the author and chief actor, and one of two school-age girls as to whether the Constitution should be kept or scraped. Audience participation -- cheers or boos for the various points made -- are encouraged at that part of the show.
I mention this because Schreck focuses mainly on the 9th and 14th Amendments to the Constitution, the latter of which in particular underpins the Supreme Court's decision that a person's right to privacy (unmentioned explicitly in the Constitution) allows a woman to get an abortion without government interference at least in the first trimester of her pregnancy.
This is a hot topic at the moment because various individual states have recently passed legislation would undermine or overrule that decision. Moreover, because of recent changes in the make-up of the Supreme Court, it is possible Row v Wade, the landmark ruling on abortion, will eventually be revisited.
In truth, it is more of a one-woman monologue than a play, although at the end, there is a brief debate between Heidi Schreck, the author and chief actor, and one of two school-age girls as to whether the Constitution should be kept or scraped. Audience participation -- cheers or boos for the various points made -- are encouraged at that part of the show.
I mention this because Schreck focuses mainly on the 9th and 14th Amendments to the Constitution, the latter of which in particular underpins the Supreme Court's decision that a person's right to privacy (unmentioned explicitly in the Constitution) allows a woman to get an abortion without government interference at least in the first trimester of her pregnancy.
This is a hot topic at the moment because various individual states have recently passed legislation would undermine or overrule that decision. Moreover, because of recent changes in the make-up of the Supreme Court, it is possible Row v Wade, the landmark ruling on abortion, will eventually be revisited.
Sunday, June 9, 2019
"Daisy Miller," or "It's All About Me"
One can wonder, when reading classic fiction, how relevant a work is to contemporary life.
Henry James, an American author who lived and worked mostly abroad, wrote the novella "Daisy Miller" in 1877-78. Highly controversial in America, where many readers were scandalized by his description of the behavior in Europe of a young American girl coming of age, the story, more than anything he had previously written, put him on the literary map.
Henry James, an American author who lived and worked mostly abroad, wrote the novella "Daisy Miller" in 1877-78. Highly controversial in America, where many readers were scandalized by his description of the behavior in Europe of a young American girl coming of age, the story, more than anything he had previously written, put him on the literary map.
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