The One and the Ninety-Nine: Forging Identity in the Age of Social Contagion

In his preface to A Man for All Seasons, playwright Robert Bolt describes Sir Thomas More as "a man with an adamantine sense of his own self." "He knew where he began and left off," Bolt writes, "what areas of himself he could yield to the encroachments of his enemies and what to the encroachments … Continue reading The One and the Ninety-Nine: Forging Identity in the Age of Social Contagion

The Backyard Bird Chronicles: Amy Tan’s Log of Lore and Love

Sometime in late April a few weeks before the close of another school year, I ask the children, gathered at my feet for a story to close their eyes. Most of them do, and it’s fun to see who’s peeking. “Imagine that you’re in your bed in the morning, and you wake up before anyone … Continue reading The Backyard Bird Chronicles: Amy Tan’s Log of Lore and Love

Help Children Understand Mimetic Desire with this Perfectly Pink Picture Book

“Vivi is dizzy with wanting pink. The kind of pink Merilee, Miranda and Wanda have.” We’ve all been dizzy with wanting something. The opening of Pink, a picture book by children's author Nan Gregory, is completely relatable. But notice: Vivi doesn't want just any pink. Her working class parents, who live in a brown apartment … Continue reading Help Children Understand Mimetic Desire with this Perfectly Pink Picture Book

Favorite Reads of 2023: Four Unexpected Delights

Calvin and Hobbes, Bill Watterson's beloved comic strip, once depicted Calvin in a philosophical stance, opining to his stuffed tiger that “today’s TV-reared audience is hip and sophisticated.” “This stuff doesn’t affect us,” the impish Calvin continues. “We can separate fact from fiction. We understand satire and irony. We’re detached and jaded viewers who aren’t … Continue reading Favorite Reads of 2023: Four Unexpected Delights