Our welfare simply is wrapped up in the welfare of the other, and we do not have a choice about it. — Marcus Mumford Marcus Mumford's acceptance speech of the Steinbeck Award this past September links Steinbeck with Lewis, ostensibly, and, more subtly, draws on the thought of Rebecca Solnit on the communitarian responses to disaster that develop, William Cavanaugh on the ethical dimensions of traveling to other communities, Bernie Sanders, Wendell Berry—anyone concerned with the plight of the poor, which is, of course, our own plight.
love in the time of corona
love in the time of corona
love in the time of corona
Our welfare simply is wrapped up in the welfare of the other, and we do not have a choice about it. — Marcus Mumford Marcus Mumford's acceptance speech of the Steinbeck Award this past September links Steinbeck with Lewis, ostensibly, and, more subtly, draws on the thought of Rebecca Solnit on the communitarian responses to disaster that develop, William Cavanaugh on the ethical dimensions of traveling to other communities, Bernie Sanders, Wendell Berry—anyone concerned with the plight of the poor, which is, of course, our own plight.