Wednesday, March 28, 2012 Carolyn Castano explores the narratives of the narco-wars in Latin America, highlighting the female roles in a male-dominated world of violence, politics, drugs and money. Castano's exhibition "El Jardin Femenil Y Otros Ocasos" loosely translates to "the female garden and other dark sunsets (or twilights)". BLOG POSTS | Albert Imperato: Less Is More in The Kid With a Bike Coming of age stories are a dime a dozen in the world of film, but this one, with its fine acting and unobtrusive direction, packs a considerable punch. | | Evelyne Politanoff: Mariano Vargas: 'Soltanto Madonne,' Neo-Baroque Erotic Snapshots | | Robert Bullen: The Great Debate: Freud's Last Session Addresses the Big Questions In Mark St. Germain's Freud's Last Session he imagines what would happen if a young C. S. Lewis and Dr. Freud were to spend an afternoon together debating softball topics such as, oh, the meaning of life and the existence of God. | | Sean Carman: The Passions of Mike Daisey Even if Mike Daisey is the Sharazad of documentary theater -- a man for whom fantastical tale-telling comes as a second nature -- it seems unfair to be too hard on him. | | Richard Dare: Brave New World: Who Muzzled All the Artists? Art has always tended to speak truth to power, to enlighten us, to challenge us, to stretch our understanding of ourselves and our place in the universe. It wasn't always so self-referential, so blasé, so up for grabs. | | MOST POPULAR ON HUFFINGTONPOST.COM |
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