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    Standards of Care
    The Sun InterviewBy Naomi PittsStandards of CareRolonda Donelson on Bias and Anti-Science Attitudes in Medicine

    The reason Black women were used to develop the field of gynecology was because they were no more than property. They weren’t seen as people; they were just seen as things. The controlling of Black women’s bodies started with chattel slavery, but it continues today.

    Milk
    Readers WriteBy Our ReadersMilk

    Pumped for an infant, spilled at the dinner table, used as a tear gas antidote

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Tribute

    Tribute

    A Tribute To Chris Bursk

    The selection that follows — just a small sample of the fifty-plus poems of his that have appeared in The Sun — display the heart and honesty that first drew us to Chris’s work in 1977. A self-described “compulsive writer,” Chris once said, “I do not wait for inspiration. . . . Some days I watch the page until a few words come — and then I find myself inside the world they invite me into.” That world will be missed.

    By Chris BurskSeptember 2021
    A Tribute To Chris Bursk
    Tribute

    The Other Side Of The Moon

    A Tribute To Lyn Lifshin

    A submission from Lifshin would often include dozens of poems about a single subject: a relationship, a memory, dancing the tango. (Dance — including ballet and ballroom — was her second great love, after writing.)

    By Lyn LifshinAugust 2020
    The Other Side Of The Moon
    Tribute

    A Tribute To Tony Hoagland

    By turns funny and sad, caustic and poignant, Tony’s poetry first appeared in The Sun in May of 2000, and he was a regular contributor for the past ten years. Though he frequently used humor to make his writing more accessible, he could still catch the reader off guard with a sudden shift in tone, ending a poem in a very different mood than where it began.

    By Tony HoaglandMarch 2019
    A Tribute To Tony Hoagland
    Tribute

    The Salt Seas Of The Heart

    A Tribute To Brian Doyle

    You believed that everything is a form of prayer, including laughter, including tears. Yes, you were a reverential man, but you weren’t stiff or boring or preachy or dour. Your essays were both concise — often just a page in length — and lush, your sentences as intricate and twisty as plants in a terrarium. You combined prose and poem (and prayer, you said) to bear witness to the miracles around us.

    By Brian DoyleSeptember 2017
    The Salt Seas Of The Heart
    Tribute

    Let It Shine

    A Tribute To Stephen Levine

    [Love] is not a dualistic emotion. It is a sense of oneness with all that is. The experience of love arises when we surrender our separateness into the universal. It is a feeling of unity. You don’t love another; you are another. There is no fear because there is no separation. It is not so much that “two are as one” as it is “the One manifested as two.” In such love there can be no unfinished business.

    By Stephen LevineMay 2016
    Let It Shine
    Tribute

    The Whole Inexplicable Business

    A Tribute To Steve Kowit

    Steve Kowit was a gifted poet and a compassionate human being. He was enthusiastic and outspoken, both on and off the page. . . . Kowit once said that he wanted to “move the reader with memorable tales that celebrate the whole inexplicable business — this strange, unspeakably marvelous life,” and that is exactly what he did.

    By Steve KowitJuly 2015
    The Whole Inexplicable Business
    Tribute

    The End Of A Sixties Dream?

    An Interview With Stephen Gaskin

    We’re becoming so bland now, and I really pray that we get to see another burst of energy. When the sixties happened, it lifted me up and blew my mind and informed my consciousness in a way that was a million times heavier and more interesting than anything I’d experienced before. I think it did that for many people. And now, knowing that such a thing can happen, I can just sit here and wait for it — like “Yeah, here it comes again!”

    By Michael ThurmanNovember 2014
    Tribute

    High Times: A Tribute to Stephen Gaskin

    excerpted from
    Monday Night Class

    Sixties icon and self-styled “nonviolent social revolutionary” Stephen Gaskin died this past July at the age of seventy-nine. Gaskin was a prominent figure on the countercultural scene in San Francisco in the late sixties and went on to found the long-running intentional community the Farm, which is still thriving in rural Tennessee.

    By Stephen GaskinNovember 2014
    High Times: A Tribute to Stephen Gaskin
    Tribute

    The Word Gets Around

    An Interview With Pete Seeger From The Sun’s Archives

    We know that the big job is to save the world, but where do you start? I’m convinced that if we are unable to work in our home communities, the job is not going to be done. The world is going to be saved by people who fight for their homes, whether they’re fighting for the block where they live in the city or a stretch of mountain or river. But unless they can fight within their own communities, I think they’re kidding themselves.

    By Howard Jay RubinMay 2014
    The Word Gets Around
    Tribute

    20, 40, 60, 80

    I readily confess: I do not relish aging. As I close in on the age of sixty, I can’t understand how life’s waters, pure and rushing, have so mysteriously carried me here; how the moon keeps on with its rhythms and the sun rises and falls and the days pass faster and faster as I use up my allotment of breaths and move toward death.

    By Genie ZeigerApril 2010
    20, 40, 60, 80
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