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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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Ecology - Page 13

  • Body and Mind
    • Abortion
    • Addiction and Recovery
    • Aging
    • Alcoholism
    • Altered States
    • Alternative Medicine
    • Cancer
    • Consciousness
    • Death
    • Dementia
    • Diet
    • Disability
    • Dreams
    • Exercise
    • Fear
    • Grief
    • Happiness
    • Healing
    • Identity
    • Medicine
    • Meditation
    • Mental Health
    • Physical Health
    • Psychology
    • Sexuality
    • Sleep
  • Culture and Society
    • Animal Rights
    • Art and Creativity
    • Cities
    • Counterculture
    • Crime
    • Education
    • Energy
    • Feminism
    • Food
    • Gender
    • Healthcare
    • Incarceration
    • Indigenous Culture
    • The Internet
    • Media
    • Oppression
    • Privacy
    • Race
    • Science and Technology
    • Sexual Violence
    • Social Justice
    • Sports
    • Sustainable Living
    • Travel
    • Vocation
    • Writing
  • Economics
    • Capitalism
    • Consumerism
    • Corporations
    • Employment
    • Globalization
    • Industrialization
    • Poverty
  • Family and Relationships
    • Adolescence
    • Adoption
    • Childhood
    • Companion Animals
    • Divorce
    • Domestic Violence
    • Elder Care
    • Friendship
    • Infidelity
    • Marriage
    • Parenting
    • Parents
    • Pregnancy and Childbirth
    • Romantic Love
    • Siblings
  • The Natural World
    • Agriculture
    • Biology
    • Climate Change
    • Ecology
    • Plants
    • Pollution
    • Wildlife
  • Politics
    • Civil Liberties
    • Democracy
    • Diplomacy
    • Government
    • Nonviolence
    • Pacifism
    • Propaganda
    • Socialism
    • Terrorism
    • War
  • Religion and Philosophy
    • Afterlife
    • Astrology
    • Atheism and Agnosticism
    • Buddhism
    • Christianity
    • Compassion
    • Ethics
    • Evangelism
    • Fundamentalism
    • Hinduism
    • Islam
    • Judaism
    • Prayer
    • Spirituality

    Browse Topics

    Ecology

    Ecology

      Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

      Descent Into The Mother

      This Mother appears in many cultures as a two-sided figure capable of both creation and destruction, of nurturing and annihilating. When we give ourselves over to the Mother we have no individuality, no consciousness.

      By Valerie AndrewsJuly 1990
      Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

      My Earth Day

      We were all terribly sorry we’d made the earth pay for our pleasure these last 200 years. We had a fear-taste in our mouths. Maybe the earth is preparing revenge. In comic books, an exposure to toxicity creates superpowered heroes, but in this world we are not so lucky.

      By SparrowJuly 1990
      The Sun Interview

      Progress And Other Lies

      An Interview With Thomas Berry

      The root of our contemporary industrial pathology is what I call a deep, hidden rage in the Western world against the human condition. We are devastating the planet in an orgy of destructiveness. We refuse to accept anything in its natural state.

      By Ralph EarleJuly 1990
      The Sun Interview

      The Legacy Of The Wild

      An Interview With Gary Snyder

      Another way of seeing the world would be to say our monuments would be our wild areas. Leaving behind wilderness for the future would be the monument of our civilization.

      By Catherine IngramApril 1990
      Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

      Curlews

      We are immortal until the hour death first seizes our imagination. This goes for species as well as individuals. To die you must once consider death and think of it as beautiful. All spiritual advances are advances in aesthetics.

      By David Brendan HopesApril 1990
      Poetry

      Sabbaths

      By Wendell BerrySeptember 1988
      The Sun Interview

      On The Poverty Of Affluence

      An Interview With Paul Wachtel

      When I look back on the Sixties, I realize it would have been absolutely and utterly inconceivable to me then that the world would be the way it is: that Ronald Reagan would be President, that our society would be so increasingly acquisitive, that the growth of the underclass would have proceeded the way it has. I really thought twenty years ago that today we would look back on the kind of race relations we had in the Sixties as a remnant of some dark age — like slavery and the era of Jim Crow — and that full integration and equality would have been achieved. Obviously, I was extremely wrong, which can be grounds for pessimism. But I do think that something radical and powerful and extraordinary happened in the Sixties. We just didn’t know how to consolidate it, to keep it going.

      By Sy SafranskyFebruary 1988
      Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

      Questions Of Lifestyle

      Voluntary simplicity has gained popularity since the late Sixties. Of course the idea is at least as old as the first religions, but nowadays voluntary simplicity is not practiced for overtly religious reasons. A cynic might say that a sense of reparation for damages done is driving some to practice a new spirit of self-denial. It touches most strongly, after all, the descendants of the adventurous, progressive pioneers from Western Europe who invaded this country a few centuries ago. In any case, exploitation is a touchstone by which many of us gauge our use of toilet paper, gasoline, rubber, washing machines, nylon, coffee, newspaper and on and on.

      By David GrantNovember 1986
      Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

      Hard Labor

      Thoreau And The Meaning Of Work

      More than any other commonplace notion, Thoreau attacked (largely through satire) his fellows’ commonplace notions about work. “Economy” is the first and largest chapter of Walden, and Thoreau gives the subject such primary consideration because he saw work consuming people’s lives before they had much of a chance to live, before they had enough time to reflect on the relationship of work to life for themselves. To Thoreau, the problem of finding one’s right work and integrating it into other proper demands on one’s life was a challenge that needed to be tackled early and with great energy if young adults weren’t going to step blindly into traps that were indeed much easier to step into than to get out of.

      By Jim RalstonNovember 1986
      Readers Write

      Old Friends

      Two World Wars and the Great Depression, the old Firesign Theater “Everything You Know Is Wrong,” a wet comb

      By Our ReadersAugust 1986
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    Ecology - Page 13

    • Body and Mind
      • Abortion
      • Addiction and Recovery
      • Aging
      • Alcoholism
      • Altered States
      • Alternative Medicine
      • Cancer
      • Consciousness
      • Death
      • Dementia
      • Diet
      • Disability
      • Dreams
      • Exercise
      • Fear
      • Grief
      • Happiness
      • Healing
      • Identity
      • Medicine
      • Meditation
      • Mental Health
      • Physical Health
      • Psychology
      • Sexuality
      • Sleep
    • Culture and Society
      • Animal Rights
      • Art and Creativity
      • Cities
      • Counterculture
      • Crime
      • Education
      • Energy
      • Feminism
      • Food
      • Gender
      • Healthcare
      • Incarceration
      • Indigenous Culture
      • The Internet
      • Media
      • Oppression
      • Privacy
      • Race
      • Science and Technology
      • Sexual Violence
      • Social Justice
      • Sports
      • Sustainable Living
      • Travel
      • Vocation
      • Writing
    • Economics
      • Capitalism
      • Consumerism
      • Corporations
      • Employment
      • Globalization
      • Industrialization
      • Poverty
    • Family and Relationships
      • Adolescence
      • Adoption
      • Childhood
      • Companion Animals
      • Divorce
      • Domestic Violence
      • Elder Care
      • Friendship
      • Infidelity
      • Marriage
      • Parenting
      • Parents
      • Pregnancy and Childbirth
      • Romantic Love
      • Siblings
    • The Natural World
      • Agriculture
      • Biology
      • Climate Change
      • Ecology
      • Plants
      • Pollution
      • Wildlife
    • Politics
      • Civil Liberties
      • Democracy
      • Diplomacy
      • Government
      • Nonviolence
      • Pacifism
      • Propaganda
      • Socialism
      • Terrorism
      • War
    • Religion and Philosophy
      • Afterlife
      • Astrology
      • Atheism and Agnosticism
      • Buddhism
      • Christianity
      • Compassion
      • Ethics
      • Evangelism
      • Fundamentalism
      • Hinduism
      • Islam
      • Judaism
      • Prayer
      • Spirituality
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