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Thursday, October 30, 2008

Chris Hedges Lecture



October 29 at 4pm Colony Ballroom - STAMP

Were you at the lecture Wednesday afternoon? What are your thoughts on the lecture? What most surprised you? What questions would you like to have asked Hedges?

Monday, October 6, 2008

Redacted

October 22 at 7pm Hoff Theater, STAMP - FREE Admission

Premiered at the 2007 Venice Film Festival, where it earned a Silver Lion "best director" award. Based on the Mahmudiyah killings, the gang-rape, murder, and burning of Abeer Qasim Hamza al-Janabi, a 14-year-old Iraqi girl in March 2006 by U.S. soldiers who also killed her parents and her younger sister, the film is a montage of stories about U.S. soldiers fighting in the Iraq conflict, focusing on the modern forms of media covering the war.

Selected readings:
  • From Hedges' War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning - Introduction and Chapter 4: The Seduction of Battle and Perversion of War.
  • From The New Yorker - "Annals of War: exposure: Behind the Camera at Abu Ghraib," 3.24.2008.
Questions to think about:
  • Once we know the truth, what is the value of war and the worth of all its tragedies?
  • Why does one document the war?

  • What does the lens of media filter out?

  • Why is the spiritual damage to those who experience war generally downplayed?

  • What is heroism?
Diamondback Dialogue
  • Journalist calls war a 'powerful narcotic' by James B. Hale (October 30, 2008).
    War is a terrible drug that can break you down and leave you begging for more. That was the lesson Chris Hedges imparted to a crowd of hundreds at a lecture about his book, War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning, on Tuesday in the Colony Ballroom of the Stamp Student Union.
  • Not so radical after all by Kyle Garton (September 24, 2008).
    "... does Hedges really claim that war is always wrong? In his introduction, Hedges writes, "despite all this, I am not a pacifist. I respect and admire the qualities of professional soldiers. ... There are times when we must take this poison [of war]." Certainly Hedges spends the bulk of his book explicating war's insidious cultural effects, but Harris misses Hedges' crucial introductory qualification."

  • Defending free speech by Matthew Parrilla (September 17, 2008).

  • In defense of ROTC by Richard Garcia (September 16, 2008).

  • Book: A force that gives the campus meaning by Malcolm Harris (September 11, 2008.)