Roberto Abraham Scaruffi

Friday 31 October 2014


Weekend reading on nybooks.com: The Review’s November 20 issue is out, with Jed Rakoffon how the criminal justice system sends innocent people to prison, Diane Ravitch on the myth of Chinese “super schools,” and Sarah Kerr on the history of Wonder Woman. Glenn Shepardreviews the autobiography of a Yanomami shaman, Leo Rubinfien presents photographs of Asian cities, James Romm looks at artifacts from Greek-ruled Egypt, and Christopher Benfey explores fear-mongering and witch-hunting. Happy Halloween.
 
THIS ISSUE SPONSORED BY THE BRITISH LIBRARY
 

Jed S. Rakoff
Our criminal justice system is almost exclusively a system of plea bargaining, negotiated behind closed doors and with no judicial oversight. The outcome is very largely determined by the prosecutor alone.
 
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Diane Ravitch
The United States is already ensnared in the testing obsession that has trapped China. It is not too late to escape.
 
Sarah Kerr
Jill Lepore’s new book argues that the superheroine has all along been a kind of “missing link” in American feminism.
 
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Glenn H. Shepard Jr.
Davi Kopenawa’s The Falling Sky is an autobiography and a passionate appeal for the rights of indigenous people, but most of all it is an elegy to oral tradition and the power of the spoken word.
 
Leo Rubinfien
The view changed constantly, but what hardly varied was the sequence of long walks each day, through mazes of unknown streets, hoping to see something unfold.
 
James Romm
Religious traditions blended and metamorphosed all across the Hellenistic world. But Egypt under Greek rule was the primary laboratory for syncretic experiments.
 
Christopher Benfey
My wife and I moved to a new house a few years back. The street address is 666. I warned her that Halloween might be lively…