The twenty-first century has not given humanity a lot to smile about between 9/11 and Iraq, Katrina and […]

High school didn’t leave much time for movies.  Maybe that’s not entirely true; movies were there and time […]

My project is influenced by graffiti art and shares graffiti’s affinity for transgressing boundaries and trespassing private property. […]

Recently, in a blog post entitled “Monumentalising Revolution,” my commentary argued that the Monument to the Revolution in Mexico City stands as an ambiguous carrier of utopian promise, which links past and present generations of struggle. Specifically, my concluding point was that this architectural space stands as a possible symbol of “the effective participation of the present generation in shaping the utopian desires of the oppressed, linked to ongoing past and present social struggles.” Written in April, there was no anticipation in this piece of the events to come that have swirled around the student movement #YoSoy132 in contesting the presidential election process in Mexico.

The end of the Reagan Era, I’m like number twelve Old enough to understand the shit’ll change forever […]

As anyone in politics knows, admitting the obvious can get you into a whole lot of trouble. NPR […]

Welcome to ToM’s final installment on the 2012 Policy History Conference.  The life of graduate students and professors […]

Cameron Crowe’s film Almost Famous is one of those flicks I like to catch up on every six […]