I first came across White House Ruin in Canyon de Chelly (pronounced dəˈʃeɪ or də·shā′) in N. Scott Momaday’s Pulitzer Prize winning novel, House Made of Dawn (1968). White House Ruin, he wrote, is the home of Talking God, one of the most prominent Navajo deities. For years I thought that White House Ruin – much like Talking God – belongs to the realm of Native American creation myths: significant for understanding the workings of the oral tradition, but long devoid of any significance and thus inconsequential for everyday life. Yet all of this changed when I first visited Canyon de Chelly in January 1994. Not only was White House Ruin one of the main attractions of the stunning, intertwined network of canyons at Canyon de Chelly, but the sun in the sky and the snow on the ground created an atmosphere that felt almost mystical.
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U.S. Election Day Results
As you may have heard, the results from this year’s mid-term elections are quite clear: control of both the Senate and the House of Representatives will be in Republican hands for the coming term. The implications of the election for American politics, however, might not be so obvious. William Chandler, Professor of Political Science at the University of California, San Diego, deciphers the results for us.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DdD7pfRquqs&feature=youtu.be
B.Y.O.B. – Bring Your Own Bag
Americans have never paid for grocery bags – paper or plastic. Markets would even double-bag on request. No charge. Hence, we were slow to observe that killing trees for unnecessary paper or making plastic just to pollute oceans or fill landfills was a bad idea. The first time I took a canvas bag to the grocery store, the bagger proudly informed me that she had carefully wrapped each item in plastic “to protect your nice bag.” So much for the environment.
An Early Halloween Treat — Patricia Briggs at Leuphana
Halloween arrived early at Leuphana this year – to be precise around the end of May. That is when best-selling Urban Fantasy writer Patricia Briggs conducted workshops and gave talks on vampires, werewolves, and the like. Interested? Don’t be afraid to watch!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wtvSrK4l-SY
Tricks or Treats – Halloween Goes German
It’s the time of the year for the undead to become alive again and for the living to be given the creeps. It’s a time of the year that children have been looking forward to for months and that even adults get excited about. The end of October marks the time of Halloween: spooky costumes, scary pumpkins, and possibly several bags filled with sweets and candy.
Even though the tradition of Halloween is a fairly recent phenomenon in Germany, you’ll find frights and thrills aplenty. So in case you don’t have anything planned yet, here are some ideas for you:
The Fault in Our Stars
Hazel Grace Lancester will never be a normal teenager. She doesn’t know that people don’t do pot but smoke it, or what it feels like to party the night away at a club with a fake ID. There is a swing set in her garden that hasn’t been used in years. Hazel was diagnosed with terminal thyroid cancer that eventually metastasized to her lungs when she was thirteen. Her reality consists of constantly carrying an oxygen tank, routine check-ups at the hospital, watching reality shows, and going to her support group. While, at first, support group sounds like the least enjoyable activity, Hazel soon meets Augustus Waters, who has lost his leg to osteosarcoma but is “on a rollercoaster that only goes up.” They connect, they talk – talk a lot, about their dreams and fears, about books and oblivion – and fall in love gradually but nonetheless intensively.