Short Takes: News From All Over: November 18, 2004
November 18, 2004
November 2004
Staff Utne.com
Confessing Christ in a World of Violence
By Staff, Sojourners
A statement signed by more than 200 Christian leaders supports a new 'confession of Christ' to reestablish Jesus' message of peace in a time when His name is being evoked for war, nationalism, and political partisanship. The statement offers five points reaffirming Christ's peaceful nature and admonishing those who would claim He represents any nation's interests. -- Harry Sheff
http://tinyurl.com/52wvc
RELATED ARTICLES
As more non-gay sexual minorities become politically active, gay rights activists must choose betwe...
Open dialogue on gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender issues is threatened...
Can gay and lesbian culture thrive outside cities...
Queer rap challenges hip-hop homophobia...
Gays are flocking to rap culture, despite its homophobic streak...
The Gay Ad Beat
By Staff, Commercial Closet
Commercial Closet is an online database that archives and tracks lesbian, gay, bi-sexual, transgender (LGBT) portrayals in advertising. A section dubbed, 'Today's Featured Ad,' and a Top 10 list are among the offerings of this unique and comprehensive resource for ad agencies, students, professors, and media consumers. -- Martin Brown
http://www.commercialcloset.org/
Nollywood Confidential
By Jamais Cascio, Worldchanging.com
While Hollywood worries that the advent of cheap, powerful software and hardware is allowing Americans to make professional-looking dubs of its product, in Nigeria, the same technology has led to Nollywood -- a virtual industry of homegrown, homemade movies that are incredibly popular among African expatriates living in the U.S. and Europe. -- Elizabeth Dwoskin
http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/000079.html
Israeli Maps, or, the Hertz Rental Car Forecast Of Future Israeli Borders
By John Petrovato, Indymedia
While touring Israel, author John Petrovato noted that Hertz's 'Touring Map of Israel' includes the West Bank and many Palestinian cities as part of the State of Israel. In this short essay, he wonders whether this is pure propaganda, or simply one nation's spatial understanding of a two-party conflict. -- Martin Brown
http://newswire.indymedia.org/en/newswire/2004/11/814287.shtml