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an impressionistic, 1901 painting titled After the Bath by Mary Cassatt depicts a mother and two children--the mother holds a younger baby, while an older child looks on--the mother's face is pensive and serene

Finding Community in Isolation in Ordinary Insanity: Fear and the Silent Crisis of Motherhood

In the conversations Sarah Menkedick has with new mothers, it becomes clear that the relationship between motherhood and fear is a cycle propelled by isolation and shame. Menkedick’s book itself, though, offers a sort of ad-hoc community of and for mothers.

black and white photograph of protestors during the 1961 Paris protests against a storefront, crouching and covering their heads--the left side of the photograph a figure in a leather trench coat holds a club

William Gardner Smith’s International Solidarity Against Police Violence

While there is much to improve in how we support each other at home and across the globe, Smith’s 1963 novel, which documents the 1961 police massacre of Algerian protestors in Paris, reminds us of the immense power in solidarity and our duty to rise up for justice and freedom.

side by side series of the cover of Our Women on the Ground

The Paradox of Journalistic Objectivity in Our Women on the Ground: Essays by Arab Women Reporting from the Arab World

The essays in this collection come together to detail not just the bravery and struggles of reporting as Arab women, but also to broaden our assumptions about journalistic neutrality, to resist the dehumanizing portrayal of Arabs, and to challenge the way we judge and perceive the value of a perspective.