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cogwbur.bsky.social
Cognoscenti
@cogwbur.bsky.social
1.1K followers 740 following 220 posts
We are the ideas and opinion section of @WBUR, Boston’s @NPR station. We share stories that make you feel part of something bigger.
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What many misunderstand about Día de los Muertos is that it isn’t a celebration of death, nor a denial of how much it hurts, writes Evy Peña. It’s a way to make space for grief — for the ache and joy that cohabit in remembrance. spr.ly/633297G1PR
Death is the boundary that gives love its shape
What many misunderstand about Día de los Muertos is that it isn’t a celebration of death, nor a denial of how much it hurts, writes Evy Peña. It’s a way to make space for grief — for the ache and joy that cohabit in remembrance.
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I never deliberately set out to raise a daughter attuned to death. But given my professional background, perhaps it was inevitable, writes Anita Hannig, a cultural anthropologist who studies the end of life.
My toddler likes to talk about death. So do I
I never deliberately set out to raise a daughter attuned to death. But given my professional background, perhaps it was inevitable, writes Anita Hannig, a cultural anthropologist who studies the end of life.
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My daughter’s fascination with death is neither cartoonish nor gratuitous, writes Anita Hannig. It stems from a place of deep curiosity. 'I like graves because I like the people in the graves,' she tells me. spr.ly/63320ACFvQ
My toddler likes to talk about death. So do I
I never deliberately set out to raise a daughter attuned to death. But given my professional background, perhaps it was inevitable, writes Anita Hannig, a cultural anthropologist who studies the end of life.
spr.ly
Did you know that Cog is on Substack? We've got a fun new feature up now, an homage to Vanity Fair's Proust questionnaire. Our first interviewee: Libby DeLana! Check us out: spr.ly/63325AfUGN spr.ly/63323AfUGF
The Proust Questionnaire: Libby DeLana
" ... [S]ometimes, I lie to myself. Quietly."
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"Susan Stamberg was one of one," writes Margaret Low, WBUR’s CEO, in this reflection about one of NPR’s “founding mothers” who died this week at 87.
Farewell, Susan Stamberg
Susan Stamberg was one of one, writes Margaret Low, WBUR’s CEO, in this reflection about a "founding mother" of NPR who died this week at 87.
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"Instinctively, with my toes covered in surf, I grabbed Sarah’s hand. And she grabbed back. The water taught me how to do that, to reach beyond worry to trust, and hold it in the palm of my hand," writes Libby DeLana, in this excerpt from her book, "Cold Joy." spr.ly/63323AIxcd
Getting to calm. Getting to warm
Instinctively, with my toes covered in surf, I grabbed Sarah’s hand. And she grabbed back. The water taught me how to do that, to reach beyond worry to trust, and hold it in the palm of my hand, writes Libby DeLana, in this excerpt from her book, "Cold Joy."
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Reposted by Cognoscenti
WBUR @wbur.org · 17d
Essay: I live in a city shaped by the James River, and work in a city shaped by the Charles River, writes Kate Neale Cooper. I've been thinking about rivers change us, and we change them.
How river shape cities — and us
In the 19th century, urban planners and engineers did what we’ve all been guilty of doing with our problems: They buried them, writes Cog editor Kate Neale Cooper. Sometimes, rivers once poisoned by i...
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The word “daylighting” appeals to the poet in me, writes poet Jan Donley. Bringing something out of the shadows and into the sun is, after all, a poetic story. So standing there, watching the flow of the river that had once been buried moved me. spr.ly/63320AtWxy
Daylighting rivers. Unburying myself
The word “daylighting” appeals to the poet in me, writes Jan Donley. Bringing something out of the shadows and into the sun is, after all, a poetic story. So standing there, watching the flow of the river that had once been buried moved me.
spr.ly
Reposted by Cognoscenti
The first week in October is Banned Books Week, and it prompted Hannah Harlow to reflect on her younger son’s love of dragons, how following his interest helped him gain a foothold in reading, and the unexpected realm it took them both to this past summer. spr.ly/63322Aod6m
Banning books is never the answer. Talking about them is
The first week in October is Banned Books Week, and it prompted Hannah Harlow to reflect on her younger son’s love of dragons, how following his interest helped him gain a foothold in reading, and the unexpected realm it took them both to this past summer.
spr.ly