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(Airdate 5/30/25) Ed Sanders is a KBLA contributor and is President of ES Advisors and public policy and electoral consulting group. On this pod Ed & Dominique slice and dice left coast topics from Sheriff Villanueva's lawsuit against the county to the approval of a $30/hr minimum wage for hotel & airport workers in L.A.https://www.instagram.com/diprimaradio/ Twitter: @edwardmsanders @diprimaradio
(Airdate 5/16/25) The phone lines are on fire and the topics are hotter than the sun. The rise in toy prices attributed to new tariffs, homeowners concerned about the lack of comprehensive soil testing after the Eaton Fire, Dominique's brother the honorable Mayor Ras J Baraka facing a "trumped up" federal trespassing charge, will the Dems ever lean into their progressive base and more. Ed Sanders, KBLA Contributor joins Dominique on the mic.Twitter: @EdwardMSandeshttps://www.instagram.com/diprimaradio/
Welcome to our new series, “The Beat Goes On,” where we will celebrate the work and enduring influence of Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs, and the other writers whom we identify as “The Beats.” - that crop of artists who worked to expand our consciousness, exploring the hidden possibilities of post WW2 America in the 1950s - Other significant names to be explored: Diane Di Prima, Tuli Kupferberg, Ed Sanders, Delmore Schwarz, Anne Waldman, Carolyn Cassidy, and many others.We will also include jazz musicians like Miles Davis, John Coltrane and Dizzy Gillespie, whose sinuous Bebop lines influenced the expansive prose of Kerouac and poetry of Ginsberg, and comedians like Lenny Bruce, Lord Buckley, Brother Theodore and Dick Gregory with their scathing critique and unmasking of our nation's hypocrisy beneath the self-deceptive rhetoric of American exceptionalism. And, then there are their artistic children like Hunter S. Thompson, Charles Bukowski, Tom Waits and Lou Reed…. The list goes on.First off: we need to define that confusing term “beat”… Once the satirists were able to pin them down, the Beats and their devotees were labelled “Beatniks” (a cold war epithet) and put into a farcical box. This is where I, as a child, first became aware of them through the character of Maynard G. Krebs on the Dobie Gillis show. The child-like, pre-hippie with the dirty sweatshirt and goatee, indelibly played by Bob Denver, later of Gilligan fame. He was a gentle figure of fun, not to be taken seriously. But, the truth goes so much deeper. Kerouac defined Beat as short for “beatitude” - a state of grace, a codex for the maturing “peace and love” Baby Boom generation coming up - those in search of existence's deeper meaning beyond the consumerist and war-like American culture being offered as our only option.Well, boy, do we need them now! HENRY MILLER INTERVIEWOur inaugural offering is a 1964 interview with the writer Henry Miller, of TROPIC OF CANCER, TROPIC OF CAPRICORN, and THE ROSY CRUCIFIXION TRILOGY fame, among many others. This is an insightful, in depth look at a artist of gargantuan influence. Miller was interviewed by Audrey June Wood in Minneapolis during a speaking tour; he considered this interview to be one of his best. Miller discourses on some of his favorite books and authors and the struggle of writing well. It was released on Smithsonian/ Folkways Records.Strictly speaking, Miller was not a Beat - he preceded them, and out lived many of them, making it to 88 in 1980, but he was their spiritual and artistic pathfinder.Living hand to mouth, on the edge, abroad in Paris, writing free form in a raw, explicit, semi-autobiographical manner, telling the truth about sex, love, art, and struggle - he set the artistic compass for the Beats - as Dostoevsky and Walt Whitman had done before him. They are all part of a chain - a chain of searchers, and we are fortunate to have these lights to guide us on our own personal journeys to self realization. Please enjoy…THE BEAT GOES ON.
(Airdate 4/18/25) Will the anti-oligarchy movement save the LA Mayor's race? Has the LA Times gone full billionaire boys club? Why has a UCLA student been detained at the border in San Ysidro? Will the Lakers pull off a "gentleman's sweep?" Will the People's Budget in LA change the game? KBLA Correspondent Ed Sanders & Host Dominique DiPrima go in on these and other titillating topics.@edwardmsandershttps://www.youtube.com/@DiPrimaRadio
(Airdate 4/4/25) Ed Sanders is a KBLA contributor and the President of ES Advisors. On this podcast we celebrate Malcom X, speak on respectability politics in Black History Month, unpack the school cell phone ban, analyze attacks on LA Mayor Karen Bass and look at Trump's executive order to dismantle police reform.https://www.instagram.com/diprimaradio/https://www.instagram.com/kbla1580/
Ed Sanders is a KBLA contributor and the President of ES Advisors. On this podcast we celebrate Malcom X, speak on respectability politics in Black History Month, unpack the school cell phone ban, analyze attacks on LA Mayor Karen Bass and look at Trump's executive order to dismantle police reform.https://www.instagram.com/diprimaradio/ https://www.instagram.com/kbla1580/
(Airdate 3/7/25) 6AM, Ed Sanders is a KBLA contributor and the President of ES Advisors. On this podcast we celebrate Malcom X, speak on respectability politics in Black History Month, unpack the school cell phone ban, analyze attacks on LA Mayor Karen Bass and look at Trump's executive order to dismantle police reform.https://www.instagram.com/diprimaradio/ https://www.instagram.com/kbla1580/
(Airdate 2/21/25) Ed Sanders is a KBLA contributor and the President of ES Advisors. On this podcast we celebrate Malcom X, speak on respectability politics in Black History Month, unpack the school cell phone ban, analyze attacks on LA Mayor Karen Bass and look at Trump's executive order to dismantle police reform.https://www.instagram.com/diprimaradio/ https://www.instagram.com/kbla1580/
(Airdate 2/7/25) Ed Sanders, Miles Low and Dominique DiPrima chop it up on everything from Super Bowl predictions, to NFL Karens...From celebrating Black History through the contributions of "Fritz" Frederick Douglass Pollard one of the NFL's first Black players and very first coach.https://www.instagram.com/mileslowmusic/?hl=en https://www.instagram.com/diprimaradio/?hl=e Twitter: @EdwardMSanders
(Airdate 1/24/25)On this pod, KBLA correspondent Ed Sanders and Dominique DiPrima try to figure out why Trump wants to release the secret file of MLK, RFK and JFK and ponder the prospects for California succeeding from the union or at least from the federal tax system.X: @edwardmsanders @diprimaradio @KBLA1580
"REHEARSALS FOR RETIREMENT" WRITTEN AND PERFORMED BY PHIL OCHS-"IF i CAN DREAM" WRITTEN BY EARL BROWN AND RECORDED BY ELVIS PRESLEY IN HONOR OF ROBERT F. KENNEDY JR."THE DAY THE WORLD ENDED" DIRECTED BY ROBERT CORMAN AND NARRATED BY CHET HUNTLEY“There's something about the guy that I love…” This is what Rich remembered that I had said about DJT. I didn't remember saying it, but I think I can relate to the veracity of his accusation. It's the re-incarnation of the Trickster that I recognize from myth - the nihilist Puck, whose talent to amuse - to entertain us as he foments chaos - is something that, I, (as someone who spent half his life trying to understand the nature of charisma) - can appreciate. Rich, as life-long activist, sees it differently: this, he feels, might be, perhaps, the last election he'll see in his lifetime, and the end of every ideal he fought for in his youth. But, he's a scrappy, latter day Dead End Kid, who ain't ready to lie down in darkness. Dig our back and forth debate.-BILL MESNIKLet's get ready to rumble. In the blue corner, a childless, blackish Vice President from Oakland, CA who was inspired by John Coltrane's "A Love Supreme" in her youth and presented with 107 days and a cat sandwich with which to salvage democracy. A piece of cake kids.In the Orange corner, a man with the graceless moves of Jerry Lewis on acid on and who has never met a "fuck you" he didn't like.A piece of drek.Let the games begin.The ball is in your court America.I know you'll do the right thing because it's about feeding your family, right?Wrong. It never was and once again we are forced to never forget.As Robert Duvall recited in "Apocalypse Now", "I love the smell of Napalm in the morning".We do, don't we?Looking at my reflection in the mirror of social change I get it. Policy was replaced by the red carpet pedigree of celebrity and the racist molester won every single demographic he insulted with vitality of an an elderly pro wrestling heel.Orange is now truly the new black and blue.Good luck and Good night.-With gratitude to Norman Mailer, Barbara Dane, Dave Van Ronk, Tuli Kupferberg, Ed Sanders, Muhammad Ali, Joan Baez, Phil Ochs, Hunter S. Thompson, Medgar Evers, Frannie Lou Hamer and Ruby Bridges, the first black child to Integrate an All-White Elementary School in the South, on November 14, 1960, at the age of six.RICH BUCKLAND
(Airdate 11/1/24) Ed Sanders is a KBLA Contributor and the President of ES Advisors Group a public affairs consultancy with over 20 years of experience implementing public policy, advising electoral campaigns and directing community based and business growth initiatives. On this podcast Dominique and Ed speed through the LA City/County Ballot sharing quick notes and strong opinions to help you make up your mind. Twitter: @EdwardMSanders @diprimaradio @KBLA1580
"Out demons out!" On October 21, 1967, poet, activist, singer and DIY publisher Ed Sanders led an exorcism of the Pentagon in USA's capital city to protest the disaster in Vietnam. Coincidentally on the same day 57 years later, Ed Sanders talks to Marc Eliot Stein from his home in Woodstock about nuclear madness, the deep state, the disasters in Ukraine and Gaza, the absurdities of USA's looming Harris vs. Trump election, and the antiwar inspiration of Allen Ginsberg, Dorothy Day, Phil Ochs, Abbie Hoffman, Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Gregory Corso. Music: "Dover Beach" by the Fugs.
Ed Sanders is the President of ES Advisors a public policy and campaign consulting firm. He is a KBLA contributor and a sports dad. On this podcast we talk Black dad tings, Black Olympic highlights, and politics from the left coast viewpoint. X: @edwardmsanders @diprimaradio @KBLA1580 First Things First w/Dominique DiPrima Streams Live Weekdays 6AM-9AM PDT Dominique DiPrima is currently the host and producer of First Things First with Dominique DiPrima on KBLA Talk 1580 where she is making radio history as the first African-American woman to host a commercial drive-time talk radio show in Los Angeles. https://www.dominiquediprima.com/about/
(Air Date: 7/26/24) Ed Sanders is the President of E3 Advisors & a KBLA contributor on this podcast. Ed and Dominique look at Newsom's directive on houseless-ness, California's role on the national stage, Kamala Harris' momentum & why Trump may replace JD Vance with Nikki Hayley. _ First Things First w/Dominique DiPrima Streams Live Weekdays 6AM-9AM PDT Dominique DiPrima is currently the host and producer of First Things First with Dominique DiPrima on KBLA Talk 1580 where she is making radio history as the first African-American woman to host a commercial drive-time talk radio show in Los Angeles. https://www.dominiquediprima.com/about/
Ed Sanders is in the studio to chop it up with Dominique & Miles on Left Coast concerns. Will the Abdullah/West ticket undermine Biden/Harris? Will Bronnie come to the Lakers? Are graduation protesters doing too much? What are you doing for Trump's Bday? The phone lines are hot and so are the topics. X: @EdwardMSanders @diprimaradio @KBLA1580
A Sermon for Trinity Sunday St. John 3:1-17 by William Klock Knock! Knock! Knock! Someone was at the door. Peter—or maybe it was John or James—got up to see who it was. It had been a long day. Everywhere Jesus went the crowds followed. Some were full of questions, but most of all they were full of problems. And they brought them all to Jesus. The blind, the deaf, the sick, the dying, the demon-possessed. This isn't how the world is supposed to be, full of tears. Everyone knew it then. Everyone knows it now. And everyone then and now hoped for a day when somehow it will all be set to rights. And so the people flocked to Jesus, because wherever he went, there was a little pocket of the world as it should be, the world as God had made it, the world set to rights. Wherever Jesus went, there was a little pocket of God's future brought into the present. A little pocket of the world where the tears are wiped away. Knock! Knock! Knock! There it was again. They'd found a quiet place to spend the night away from the crowds, but someone had found it. Peter was getting himself ready to tell whoever-it-was to go away, so image his surprise when he opened the door and saw Nicodemus standing there. They'd never met, but everyone knew who Nicodemus was. He was a rich man, he was one of the leaders of the Pharisees, but more than that, he was a member of the Sanhedrin—the ruling council of the Jews. And here he was at the door of the house where Jesus was staying, standing there with a couple of his servants, politely asking to speak with the rabbi now that the crowds were gone. Nicodemus had seen what Jesus was doing. Nicodemus had heard what Jesus was preaching. Nicodemus had watched from the edge of the crowds and listened in the temple court. In Jesus he saw the hopes of Israel being fulfilled. He saw that little pocket of God's future following wherever Jesus went. He believed—he just wasn't sure what exactly it was that he was believing. Have you ever had that happen? You see God at work. It's obvious. But it's not what you expected. So you believe, but you don't really understand. That's where Nicodemus was. He wasn't one of the simple people who just needed some physical manifestation of the kingdom—like the blind and the deaf and the sick. He knew the scriptures. He knew how the God of Israel was supposed to fulfil his prophecies. And Jesus was fulfilling them, but not in the ways anyone expected. So the great theologian had come, not to be healed, but to ask how all this can be. “We know that you're a teacher who's come from God,” Nicodemus said to Jesus, “Nobody can do the signs that you're doing, unless God is with him.” You can hear the unspoken question implicit in Nicodemus' affirmation. It's the theologian's equivalent of “Lord, I believe. Help my unbelief.” It was like this for everyone. The disciples saw, they heard, they believed, but whenever Jesus pressed them with questions, ninety per cent of the time they gave the wrong answer. Peter knew with certainty that Jesus was the Messiah, the son of the living God. But when push came to shove, he drew his sword and was ready to bring God's kingdom with violence. Even the disciples were full of all the wrong ideas the Jews had about the Messiah and the coming of the kingdom. Nicodemus was in the same boat. It's just that he knew he was missing something and here he was to get it sorted out. But Jesus doesn't give him the answer he wanted, because even if Jesus explained it all, even if Jesus connected all the dots for Nicodemus, that's wouldn't solve the problem. Nicodemus would still need something more. And this is where Jesus answers his implicit question with those familiar words, “Let me tell you the solemn truth. Unless someone has been born from above, he won't be able to see God's kingdom.” It wasn't just Nicodemus struggling with all this. Think of all our Gospel lessons during Easter- and Ascensiontide, those lessons where Jesus tells his disciples that as good as it is for him to be with them, he's going to have to leave so that something better can happen. And they don't understand. They're confused. If Jesus leaves, that little pocket of the kingdom that follows him wherever he goes, it will be gone with him. They didn't understand either. They, too, had to be born from above in order to see—in order to be part of—the kingdom. In order to themselves become little pockets of God's future in the present. And, of course, that's what we saw last Sunday as we remembered Pentecost. The God of Israel sent his Spirit to indwell his people—they were born from above—and suddenly it all made sense and Peter preached that Pentecost sermon that would have been impossible for him to preach just the day before and from there they went out to make God's kingdom known to the world. This is, incidentally, why we have this story of Nicodemus' visit to Jesus as our Gospel lesson today. Trinity Sunday didn't come along until the high Middle Ages. Long before today was Trinity Sunday, it was the Sunday after Pentecost and today's Gospel was assigned to explain the Pentecost events we read about last Sunday. When Trinity Sunday came along no one changed the lesson, because here we see the Trinity revealed in the exchange between Jesus and Nicodemus as the Son reveals that the Father must send the Spirit to create, to give life to a renewed people. So Nicodemus knew the story. He knew the God of Israel. But he knew there was more to it. He knew the world is not as it should be and he knew that that the people of Israel were failing at what God had called them to be. And he knew the Lord's promises to set the world and Israel to rights. He saw the Lord's promises being fulfilled in Jesus and he'd heard Jesus talking about this new work, this new exodus, this new deliverance of the people—this exodus even greater than the one that defined them when the Lord delivered them from Pharaoh. And Jesus warned about a judgement soon to come on those who refused to repent of their old ways and to get in line with the Lord's plans. It didn't fit into the expectations of the people of Israel and especially not into what the Pharisees expected, but there had to be something to it, because the Lord was so clearly with Jesus. Again, Jesus picks up on the question implied in Nicodemus' statement. He says, “The central truth you're missing, Nicodemus, is that you've got to be born from above to see the kingdom of God.” Nicodemus understood so much. If anyone wanted to see God's will done and his kingdom come on earth as in heaven it was the Pharisees. That's what they lived for. And Nicodemus saw it in Jesus, but he struggled to reconcile his expectations with what Jesus was saying. And Jesus says that what he's missing—what all of Israel is missing—is this new birth, this being born from above, this being born again. And it's important to understand that as much as Jesus is saying, “You, Nicodemus, must be born again—which is how the ears of modern Christians have been trained to hear this in individualistic terms—Jesus' stress is on Israel, on the whole people. In verse 7 he says, “Do not marvel that I said to you, ‘You must be born again.'” When he says “You must be born again,” that's plural, it's “you all must be born again”. Israel as a people had been born the first time when they passed through the waters of the Red Sea and Jesus is saying that now Israel had to be born a second time. This is why John was out in the wilderness baptizing in the Jordan, but that wasn't all. Israel had been baptised in water before and it wasn't enough. Now they needed to be baptised in both water and the Spirit. Israel was always supposed to be a pocket of God's future in the present—so that the nations could see and know the goodness of God. And Jesus is saying that it's the Spirit who will finally make the people what God had called them to be. As Jesus had said over and over in various ways, he, Jesus, was sent by the Father, but that it would be the Spirit—the “Helper”—who would come after, who would testify to them about this truth and then that through them, this Spirit would testify to the rest of Israel and even to the nations…fulfilling the prophets, effectively creating a new Israel, and through this new people, fulfilling the mission the Lord had given to them from the beginning: to fill the world with the knowledge of him as the waters cover the sea and to testify to the nations in such a way that the nations would flock to the God of Israel to give him glory. But Nicodemus didn't get it. Neither did Jesus' disciples. Because the Spirit had not yet come to testify about Jesus. So Nicodemus asked Jesus, “How can I be born again? I know you're not talking about returning to my mother's womb, but what do you mean? A person is only born once.” And as he answers Nicodemus, this is where Jesus switches from saying things like “Unless one is born again” to “Unless you—all of you—are born again”. Because it's not so much about one person being born again or even about a whole bunch of individuals being born again. It's about Israel as a people being born again so that she could be put back on track to fulfil her mission—the one given to Abraham two thousand years before. And this idea of birth would have resonated particularly with someone like Nicodemus, because to be a Jew was all about being born as part of Abraham's family. Other things like circumcision and the sabbath and what you ate (or didn't eat) were important and especially so for the Pharisees, but those things were important because they identified you as part of Abraham's family. They also drew a clear boundary between those who were in the family and all the uncircumcised, unclean gentiles who were most definitely not. What Jesus is saying now is that being born into Abraham's family in the way the Jews had been thinking about it all this time wasn't enough. In fact, it never had been enough. And Nicodemus should have known this. For two millennia people were being born into Abraham's family and God's kingdom still hadn't come. For two millennia people were born into Abraham's family and still the Gentiles hadn't experienced the Lord's blessing through them, at least not on the large scale envisioned in the Scriptures. Just the opposite. The Prophet Zechariah had spoken of a day when the Gentiles would be grabbing hold of Jews by their coattails saying, “Take us with you, because we hear that God is with you!” Instead, because of the way most of Abraham's children were living, the nations mocked them and taunted them saying, “Where's your God?” It takes more than being born of the flesh of Abraham. It even takes more than being born of water, as Israel had been in the Red Sea. And as a man devoted to the law, to torah, Nicodemus should have understood this. The Pharisees were all about exhorting their fellow Jews to be better keepers of the law, but it wasn't working. They of all people should have been looking forward to the day when the law would no longer be written on tablets of stone, but engraved on the very hearts of the people by the Holy Spirit. So Jesus says to Nicodemus, “I'm telling you the solemn truth. Unless you're born of water and the Spirit you cannot enter God's kingdom. Flesh is born from flesh, but spirit is born from spirit.” Israel needs something more than a biological inheritance. What does Jesus mean, though, when he talks about being born of water and the Spirit? This is was what John the Baptist was preaching about. God was about to lead his people in a new exodus. As Israel had been led through the waters of the Red Sea to become a covenant family, so John was calling people to pass through the waters of the Jordan—a step of repentance and faith—and into a new covenant. They all needed that baptism of repentance. They needed to turn aside from their own misguided expectations of the kingdom and of the Messiah and from their failures to be faithful to the Lord and his covenant. But remember what John promised. When people asked if he was the Messiah he said that he was only the forerunner. John said, “I baptise you with water, but he will plunge you into the Holy Spirit.” And that's just what Jesus does. As we recalled last week on Pentecost, Jesus takes those who have repented, who have turned aside from every false lord, from every false god, from every false source of security, from every false way in order to take hold of him in faith by passing through the waters of baptism and he plunges us into the Holy Spirit. And it's the Spirit who does the work of transforming us. It's the Spirit who regenerates us. It's the Spirit who causes us to be born again as he takes our old dead wood and unites it to the life of Jesus, causing us to bear fruit—making us the pocket of God's future in the present. Through the Spirit we're born again, born from above. The last few months I've been reading Ed Sanders' books on the relationship between the New Testament and Second Temple Judaism. Sanders was a brilliant scholar and full of deep insights. His work has had a profound impact on how we understand the New Testament. But he wasn't a Christian. He described himself as a “secular Mainline Protestant”. And it shows. As brilliant as his insights into Jesus and Paul are, as fascinating as he is to read, it's all spiritually dry as dust. There's no doxology to any of it. Sanders even refused to weigh in on whether or not Christianity is superior to Judaism. And so it was like a breath of fresh air when I finished Sanders' “Paul and Palestinian Judaism” and picked up Tom Wright's new book of Romans and it was full of the same sorts of brilliant and deep insights—many of them ideas that started with Sanders back in the 1970s—but Bp. Wright's work is overflowing with doxology and gospel joy. That's the difference that Jesus and the Spirit make in us. Think of your baptism as something like Israel at the Red Sea. There was the parted water and God calling Israel to pass through to freedom and new life on the other side. There was no receiving the law in Egypt; they had to cross to the other side of the sea to find covenant, to find relationship with the Lord. And so we stand at the waters of baptism today. In them Jesus gives his promise: Repent, turn aside from every false way, trust me, follow me in faith and you will find forgiveness of sins and new life through the Spirit. To pass through the waters of baptism is to take hold of Jesus' promise and to be born again of water and the Spirit—and to be made part of this new covenant people ready and equipped to live and to proclaim his kingdom. But, again, this didn't fit what Nicodemus knew. “How can this be so?” he asks. And Jesus asks a bit incredulously, “How can you not know this? You're one of the teachers of Israel!” Nicodemus knew the story. He understood how Israel had so miserably failed in her mission. As a Pharisee he was abundantly aware of this problem. Jesus tells Nicodemus: God has heard your cries and is visiting his people and he's doing it in me. I'm the son of man, the one spoken of by Daniel all those years ago. I can tell you reliably the things of heaven because I'm the one who has come down from heaven. At this point, I think, Nicodemus starts to connect the dots as much as anyone could in those days before the Spirit was sent. He started to understand, because now Jesus really starts to correct what was wrong with Israel's thinking about herself, about what it meant to be God's people, and about what it would mean for the Lord to come to deliver them. Jesus reminds Nicodemus of an event from Israel's time in the wilderness. The Israelites grumbled against Moses—which was ultimately grumbling against the Lord—and so he sent poisonous snakes into the camp. They bit people and many of those who were bit died. But the Lord also gave Moses the remedy. He told Moses to cast a snake out of bronze and to mount it on a pole. Anyone who would look up to the bronze snake would be healed. And now Jesus says, “Just as Moses lifted up that snake in the wilderness, in the same way the son of man must be lifted up so that everyone who believes in him may share in the life of God's new age.” Jesus is pointing to his own crucifixion. As the snake was the affliction of the people lifted up for them to look at, so Jesus would take the affliction of Israel on himself—he would suffer the punishment for their sins—and be lifted up on the cross. He would be lifted up for everyone to look upon—to see the horror and the gravity of their sin, to see that the wages of sin is death. But they would also see Jesus taking it all on himself and in that, the horror and ugliness of his being raised up would become an act by which he is ultimately glorified. In the cross we see the love of God made manifest in Jesus. And Jesus says in the familiar words we all know, “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved.” Jesus corrects the central error in the thinking of Israel in his day. They were hoping and praying for the day when the Lord would come, not just to vindicate his people, but to judge their enemies—to rain down fire and brimstone on the Romans and all the other gentiles. But instead Jesus tells Nicodemus that he's come not to condemn, but to save all who will look to him. All. The Jews thought the Lord, when he came, would vindicate them for their faithfulness, but Jesus says to Nicodemus, even the most righteous of you need this new birth, this salvation if you want to know God's vindication. And it's not just for you. The Jews looked forward to the condemnation he would bring, but Jesus says he's come not to condemn, but to save. And this is where the part about being born again of water and the Spirit comes into play. Being born of water and the Spirit supersedes biology and genealogy. In Jesus God opens his arms to welcome Jew and Gentile alike. It was the Jews first, because if the Lord is faithful—and he is—he had to first fulfil his promises to his own people, but most importantly, in that act of faithfulness, the nations would take note of the God of Israel. In Jesus, the nations would see that the God of Israel is not like the puny, selfish, fickle, and powerless gods they have known, and they would then flock to this God who is truly good and faithful. This is what God's future looks like, not just Israel set to rights and everyone else set on fire. God's future is for everyone who sees Jesus and his people wiping away the tears and forgiving sin, who believes, and who becomes part of it—whether born of Abraham by the flesh or born of Abraham by faith—all born in God's Spirit. Abraham's family is integral to the story and the plan, but Jesus reminds us that genes and DNA were never really what made anyone part of Abraham's family; it was about faith. It was faith for Abraham himself and it was faith in God's promises for all who followed after: for Isaac and Jacob, for Joseph and Moses and Joshua, for gentiles like Rahab and Ruth, and even for the great kings like David and Solomon. And God's promise was that through his covenant people, through these people who knew him in faith and were reconciled to him by faith, he would bless the nations. It happened here and there in the Old Testament. Rahab and Ruth are two of many small-scale testimonies to that, but here we finally see the Lord's promise coming to full fruit. It's what we celebrated last week on Pentecost as Jesus sent the Holy Spirit on these men of Israel gathered from around the world. They had heard Peter preach about Jesus and what he'd come to do. They rallied to Jesus in faith and in response Jesus poured his Spirit into them. Finally, through Jesus, Israel became the source of blessing she was intended to be—not by flesh, but by the Spirit—as these men and women took the good news to the nations: Jesus is Lord. He has conquered sin and death. In him is the forgiveness of sin, in him is life, in him God has returned to his creation as King. And in him—the Incarnate Word—God makes himself known. In Jesus, God Incarnate, we have the restoration and fellowship with our Creator that he has been working towards ever since the day we rebelled and were cast out of his presence. In Jesus, God's kingdom—his new creation—has been inaugurated, in us and through us in the world. Brothers and Sisters, we are that people the God of Israel was working to create and to make new all those millennia. Jesus and the Spirit have finally made us that pocket of God's future in the present, the pocket where the world is set to rights and where the tears are wiped away, the pocket shows the world the faithfulness and goodness of God. May we be that people—God's future in the present, the heralds of his new creation—may we be faithful in being this Spirit-renewed gospel people who make known God's glory to the world. Let us pray: Almighty God we praise you this morning for the grace you have shown us. Even as we rebelled against you, our good Creator, you were setting in motion our redemption: Father sending, calling, electing; Son speaking, coming, dying, rising; and Spirit uniting, renewing, regenerating, empowering. In the redemption of the world we see the glory of the Trinity and the majesty of the Unity and in gratitude we fall before you with the angels to sing, “Holy, holy, holy Lord God almighty.” By your grace, keep us strong in faith, O Lord, but keep us also faithful in our witness and our ministry to make your redeeming love known to the world. We ask this through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord, who lives and reigns together with you and the Holy Spirit, one God forever and ever. Amen.
Los Angeles Trending Topics w/Ed Sanders and Dominique DiPrima X: @edwardmsanders @diprimaradio First Things First w/Dominique DiPrima Streams Live Weekdays 6AM-9AM PDT They say “all politics is local.” The KBLA morning show offers news, commentary and conversation from a uniquely unapologetic perspective.
On the latest BONUS podcast, we address the often overlooked step of cleaning your firearms after the season. Longtime gunsmith Ed Sanders teaches us all a thing or two. Do you purposely dry fire your rifle to release the spring pressure? Do you apply a coating of oil in your barrel after the season to prevent pitting? What about the newer guns with applied camo finishes? How do you maintain them? Pat Epling of Mossy Oak joins us to explain all that. Lastly Dr. Ned Miller takes a few minutes to help us understand the sleep debt we all incur during turkey season and how to recognize the signs of its time to stop and get some sleep. Wake up and smell the coffee guys, let's take care of our guns and ourselves. This one needs to be shared with the younger hunters to help them develop good habits. Listen, Learn and Enjoy. Show Notes:Ed Sanders Gunsmith: https://edsandersgunsmith.com/ When does deer season start? If you want the best deer herd possible this fall - then deer season starts NOW. For a limited time podcast listeners get 10% off with coupon code: GKPOD Support the Show.Stay connected with GameKeepers: Enter the Gamekeeper LS Tractor Giveaway!: https://mossyoakgamekeeper.com/gamekeeper-ls-tractor-giveaway/ Instagram: @mossyoakgamekeepers Facebook: @GameKeepers Twitter: @MOGameKeepers YouTube: @MossyOakGameKeepers Website: https://mossyoakgamekeeper.com/ Subscribe to Gamekeepers Magazine: https://bit.ly/GK_Magazine Buy a Single Issue of Gamekeepers Magazine: https://bit.ly/GK_Single_Issue Join our Newsletters: Field Notes - https://bit.ly/GKField_Notes | The Branch - https://bit.ly/the_branch Have a question for us or a podcast idea? Email us at gamekeepers@mossyoak.com
Ed Sanders says cash reparations are not possible, Dominique pushes back & other trending topics. First Things First w/Dominique DiPrima Streams Live Weekdays 6AM-9AM PDT They say “all politics is local.” The KBLA morning show offers news, commentary and conversation from a uniquely unapologetic perspective.
Dominique DiPrima and KBLA contributor Ed Sanders take on the censorship of a student valedictorian supporting Palestine, the Supreme Court looking at anti-camping policies in cities and whether it is legal to criminalize homelessness, unfair laws dating back to slavery, Kanye West being sued for beating up the man who groped his wife and more.... X: @EdwardMSanders @diprimaradio @KBLA1580
Meg and Jessica engage a bunch of BFFs of the podcast and celebrate Desperately Seeking the 80s' 100th episode at Bailey's Corner Pub.Please check out our website, follow us on Instagram, on Facebook, and...WRITE US A REVIEW HEREWe'd LOVE to hear from you! Let us know if you have any ideas for stories HEREThank you for listening!Love,Meg and Jessica
It's a free flowing conversation on Left Coast politics with Dominique DiPrima, Ed Sanders and the KBLA Delegation. Twitter/X: @EdwardMSanders @diprimaradio
The Libertines sortent un nouveau single tapageur ‘' Oh Shit‘' extrait du quatrième album studio, ‘'All Quiet on the Eastern Esplanade'', qui sortira le 5 avril, écrit par Carl Barat et Pete Doherty. U2 partage une vidéo de "Beautiful Day" tournée le 2 mars lors du dernier concert donné dans la sphère à Las Vegas, images de la performance, des fans exprimant leur gratitude pour le spectacle, ainsi que des images incroyables présentées dans l'arène immersive. Kings of Leon était l'invité du show USA Today, à l'occasion de la promotion de son dernier titre "Mustang" et de son prochain album ‘'Can We Please Have Fun'', le chanteur du groupe a raconté l'effet lors de la 1ère écoute de "Sex On fire" à la radio. Axel Rose réfute des allégations d'abus sexuels sur un ancien mannequin de Penthouse. Le batteur de Blur, Dave Rowntree sera candidat au parlement britanique, nouvelle étape dans sa carrière politique en se présentant aux prochaines élections législatives au Royaume-Uni. Les procureurs ont abandonné les poursuites contre les trois prévenus accusés du recel de manuscrits de la célèbre chanson "Hotel California" des Eagles, une volte-face qui a mis fin au procès. Mots-Clés : hymne, énergie, tournée, Royaume-Uni, Irlande, Dublin, clip, Bono, public, résidence de U2 à Las Vegas, résidence, Beautiful day, tube planétaire, Caleb Followill, épouse, soupe aux tortillas, directeur artistique, Zane Lowe, Australie, Finlande, téléchargé, plateformes numériques, Grande-Bretagne,épilogue, paroles, origine, valeur, documents, million, dollars, représentants légaux, leader, plainte, New Yorke,agression sexuelle, Sheila Kennedy, fête,hôtel, cocaïne, alcool, attaque, plaignante, conseil, comté, Norwich, travailliste, Mid Sussex, siège, conservateurs, génération, vote, élire, député, parlement, audience, Don Henley, crédit, Ed Sanders, possession, paroles, documents, secret professionnel. --- Classic 21 vous informe des dernières actualités du rock, en Belgique et partout ailleurs. Le Journal du Rock, chaque jour à 7h30 et 18h30. Merci pour votre écoute Pour écouter Classic 21 à tout moment : www.rtbf.be/classic21 Retrouvez tous les contenus de la RTBF sur notre plateforme Auvio.be Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement.
Ed Sanders is the President of ES Advisors and a Contributor to KBLA 1580. His many years of experience working on political campaigns inform his analysis of Super Tuesday on the national stage. Twitter/X: @EdwardMSanders
Get ready for it, we kick things off this week with “News with Nick.” Brian Wilson's conservatorship, Vultures 1 tops the charts, and four Beatles biopics are up for discussion.Song: Tapir! - “Unknown”Next up, Greg brings us “Three For Thursday.” Idles latest album Tangk is their first work with producer Nigel Godrich and the band, while staying true to form, delves appropriately deeper with the new producer than on past albums. The influential Squarepusher is out with a new album, as is Australian progressive metal band Caligula.Songs: Idles - “Gratitude”Squarepusher - “Wendorlan”Caligula's Horse - “The Stormchaser”Jay has prepared charts and diagrams to breakdown the drama over the Eagle's long lost, or apparently stolen, handwritten lyrics to Hotel California. First lent, in the late 1970s, to writer Ed Sanders for an unpublished book about the Eagles, the handwritten drafts were sold to a rare manuscript dealer. The dealer, Glenn Horowitz, is now being charged, along with two other individuals, with “possession of stolen property.” We attempt to unravel the story, with moderate success.Song: Brigitte Calls Me Baby - “Eddie My Love”
Proposition 1 on California's statewide b allot would reshape how the state deals with mental health, substance abuse and housing. It is supported by some progressives and rejected by others. Ed & Dominique look at the pros and cons and almost figure it out. Ed Sanders is the President of ES Advisors Group, a public affairs consultancy. Twitter/X: @EdwardMSanders @diprimaradio @KBLA1580
With growers making up such a small percentage of the population, our Farm Legacy Series has become a special part of how we can get their stories out into the world. Special guests, Charlie Sanders and Ed Sanders, join hosts Sal Sama and Ryan Priest in the podcast room for this episode of The Farm Legacy Series on The High Ground powered by Premier Companies. Charlie and Ed are owners of Sanders Farm and Sanders Farm Service.You'll hear about Charlie and Ed's history with the business and learn about both Sanders Farm and Sanders Farm Service. The service component involves fertilizer, chemical, and seed, and has been around since the ‘60s! In addition to learning about some of the challenges the brothers are facing, you'll hear about Ed and Charlie's involvement in Premier Companies and why being a member of the co-op has been helpful to them. “The one thing I'll say about Premier that we have really grown to love is the fact that no matter what, I feel like I've always had this ace in my back pocket to take care of us if we need it.”
With growers making up such a small percentage of the population, our Farm Legacy Series has become a special part of how we can get their stories out into the world. Special guests, Charlie Sanders and Ed Sanders, join hosts Sal Sama and Ryan Priest in the podcast room for this episode of The Farm Legacy Series on The High Ground powered by Premier Companies. Charlie and Ed are owners of Sanders Farm and Sanders Farm Service.You'll hear about Charlie and Ed's history with the business and learn about both Sanders Farm and Sanders Farm Service. The service component involves fertilizer, chemical, and seed, and has been around since the ‘60s! In addition to learning about some of the challenges the brothers are facing, you'll hear about Ed and Charlie's involvement in Premier Companies and why being a member of the co-op has been helpful to them. “The one thing I'll say about Premier that we have really grown to love is the fact that no matter what, I feel like I've always had this ace in my back pocket to take care of us if we need it.”
With growers making up such a small percentage of the population, our Farm Legacy Series has become a special part of how we can get their stories out into the world. Special guests, Charlie Sanders and Ed Sanders, join hosts Sal Sama and Ryan Priest in the podcast room for this episode of The Farm Legacy Series on The High Ground powered by Premier Companies. Charlie and Ed are owners of Sanders Farm and Sanders Farm Service.You'll hear about Charlie and Ed's history with the business and learn about both Sanders Farm and Sanders Farm Service. The service component involves fertilizer, chemical, and seed, and has been around since the ‘60s! In addition to learning about some of the challenges the brothers are facing, you'll hear about Ed and Charlie's involvement in Premier Companies and why being a member of the co-op has been helpful to them. “The one thing I'll say about Premier that we have really grown to love is the fact that no matter what, I feel like I've always had this ace in my back pocket to take care of us if we need it.”
Public policy advocate and KBLA contributor Ed Sanders takes on Super Bowl favorites and controversies, the LA County District Attorney's race, Biden's popularity challenge, Attorney Christopher Darden's quest to become a judge, what real public safety looks like and the crucial issue of water management. www.groundswellforwater.com
Political and Public Policy Strategist & soccer dad Ed Sanders joins Dominique to pay tribute to Kobe Bryant and his daughter Gianna on the anniversary of their death. We also agree to disagree on how to decide who to vote for in the pivotal positions of DA and Judge. Twitter/X: @EdwardMSanders @diprimaradio @KBLA1580
(Airdate 12/13/23) The intertwined fates of Tookie Williams and Jamie Foxx; the projects we'd like to see L.A. Mayor Karen Bass take on; why water justice is yet another issue with an outsized impact on Black people; what to do about the OC oil spill and what we are binge watching this holiday season are among the many topics in this freewheeliing convo. X: @EdwardMSanders @diprimaradio @KBLA1580
Is it fair for luminaries and lawmakers to protect their brand rather than speaking out against injustice? Where are the grand plans of Rick Caruso and Snoop Dogg now that the election is over? Are we gaining momentum in the fight to house the unsheltered? What was the point of the Great Blue & Red Gubernatorial debate? Ed Sanders, Dominique DiPrima & the KBLA Delegation on the phones are on the case. X: @EdwardMSanders @diprimaradio @KBLA1580
Ed Sanders is the President of ES Advisors and a regular contributor to KBLA Talk 1580. It's a feisty Friday as Ed and Dominique mix it up on local issues and…weed. X: @EdwardMSanders @diprimaradio @KBLA1580
Ed Sanders joins Dominique to read between the headlines on where we are with L.A's unhoused persons crisis? Does the City Council have too much power? How do we overcome NIMBYism? The untimely death of Matthew Perry, Halloween, drug addiction, buildng strong Black familes and more are all in the conversation. Twitter/X: @EdwardMSanders @diprimaradio @KBLA1580
Did Diddy have something to do with Tupac's murder? Will LaPhonza Butler jump in the Calif Senate race? Do the Hollywood studios care that the public supports striking actors? Are we doing enough to help children as studies show they have still not recovered from pandemic setbacks? We've got a lot to talk about? Twitter/X: @EdwardMSanders @diprimaradio @KBLA1580
Everything from Deion Sanders' Colorado Buffaloes to the accusations against Russell Brand…From Lauren Boeberts bipartisan booty call to insights on the United Auto Workers strike Ed Sanders and Dominique are smashing the BS and grabbing the facts. Twitter/X: @edwardmsanders @diprimaradio @kbla1580
Dominique DiPrima and KBLA Contributor Ed Sanders (and Miles Low) get irreverent and analytical on everything from Spain's Women's Soccer controversy, to the Las Vegas Raiders to Enrique Tarrio's lengthy sentence. It's a progressive take on trending topics of the Left Coast. Twitter: @EdwardMSanders @diprimaradio @MilesLowMusic @KBLA1580
Ed Sanders is the president of ES Advisors Group, a public affairs consultancy with over 20 years of experience implementing public policy, advising electoral campaigns, and directing community-based and business growth initiatives. In addition Mr. Sanders is a contributor on Fox Soul TV and KBLA Talk 1580. On this podcast we chop it up with callers on everything from the new Kobe Bryant statue (should LeBron get one?) to how to start your own union. Twitter: @EdwardMSanders @diprimaradio @KBLA1580
Från 2019. En man åtalas för att ha hypnotiserat en grupp ungdomar till att begå en rad makabra mord. Han blir snart en av USA:s mest hatade personer. Han heter Charles Manson. Nya avsnitt från P3 Dokumentär hittar du först i Sveriges Radio Play. Året är 1970. Utanför Los Angeles majestätiska domstolsbyggnad sitter en grupp unga kvinnor. Alla har ristat in ett kryss i pannan. De sjunger, dansar och visar sitt stöd för den åtalade: Charles Manson. Mannen som har förändrat deras liv.När historien nystas upp kommer den mörka sidan av hippie-rörelsen fram. Det handlar om droger, fri kärlek, The Beach Boys och bestialiska mord. Det här är en berättelse om en man som än idag, ett halvt sekel senare, rör upp känslor.Medverkande:George Stimson, nära vän till Manson och som skrivit boken "Goodbye Helter Skelter".Dianne Lake, medlem i kollektivet och hade en relation med Manson.Sandra Good, hade en relation med Manson och var en del av kollektivet.Nikolas Schreck, nära vän till Manson, skapare av dokumentären "Charles Manson: Superstar" och skrivit boken "The Manson File".Ed Sanders, täckt fallet som journalist och skrivit två böcker; "The Family" och "Sharon Tate: A Life".Virginia Graham, nyckelvittne i rättegången.En dokumentär av: Robin Jonsson.Producent: Lars Truedson / Tredje Statsmakten Media.Exekutiv producent: David Mehr.Sändes för första gången 2019.
Welcome back to Powering Your Retirement Radio. I am Dan Leonard, your host. Today I am joined by Ed Sanders. Ed Sanders is a financial strategist with over 19 years of experience in the finance industry. Originally from Akron, Ohio, Ed attended the University of Arizona before moving to the Bay Area to work for Wells Fargo after graduation. In 2004, Ed made the decision to leave the corporate world behind and pursue his passion for helping people achieve financial freedom. As a financial strategist, Ed specializes in college planning, risk reduction, creating tax-free income sources, and eliminating debt. In this episode, Ed will share answers to many problems people face including: Debt as a hindrance to accumulating wealth. What is your effective interest rate, and why it matters. Eliminating Debt Forever. The snowball strategy. Paying cash for cars and what that costs you. Ed's Webinars Series. Thank you for tuning in to today's podcast with a financial strategist, Ed Sanders. We hope you found his insights and advice on college planning, risk reduction, creating tax-free income sources, and debt elimination helpful and informative. If you have any further questions or would like to learn more about Ed's services, please visit his website and other links below. Don't forget to subscribe to our podcast for more expert insights and advice on a variety of topics. Thank you again for listening, and we'll talk with you in the next episode. Ed's Contact Information: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/edwardfsanders Website: www.edwardfsanders.com Enter debt for immediate effective interest cost: www.eliminatedebtforever.com To book a time to talk to Ed → http://esanders.youcanbook.me For more episodes, please visit the Podcasts website: https://poweringyourretirement.com/2023/04/29/edward-f-sanders-financial-strategist
Interview with Mark Bingham Guitarist-singer-songwriter-arranger and esteemed producer Mark Bingham (a 2021 recipient of Offbeat magazine's Lifetime Achievement in Music Business Award), has dedicated over 50 years to pursuing creativity regardless of category. From working with seminal punk and No Wave bands MX-80 Sound and Bush Tetras to Cajun groups Michot's Melody Makers and Lost Bayou Ramblers to Beat poets Ed Sanders and Allen Ginsberg to jazz artists John Scofield, Wycliffe Gordon and Nicholas Payton to celebrated pop stars like Marianne Faithfull, Dr. John, R.E.M., Roy Orbison and Jon Batiste, Bingham has always sought out projects that get his creative juices flowing. “There's been no linear path,” he said of his storied career. “It's been up and down and all around, and you just try to find good people to work with.” A true child of the ‘60s, Bingham is from an era when ‘Question Authority' was de rigueur. He ended up taking it to heart, both politically and musically. While attending Indiana University in the early ‘70s, at the peak of the anti-war movement on the campuses all across America, the Bloomington, Indiana native formed the Screaming Gypsy Bandits, a sprawling 10-piece theatrical psych rock group with an absurdist/prankster bent that shared the renegade stance of such bands of the day as Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention, Captain Beefheart and His Magic Band and the Hampton Grease Band (led by visionary frontman Col. Bruce Hampton). Mark's Info https://markbingham.bandcamp.com/music
We look back at the revolutionary dropout cultures of 1960s and 2000s, a time when middle class youth fled the suburbs to be free in urban bohemia. We look at the popular anarchist ideas and practices during these times alongside the relationship between counterculture, the left, and liberation movements. Armed Love is a series about the revolutionary subculture of the sixties. Episode one was an interview with Peter Coyote, and episode 2 was a discussion of Charles Manson and the Lyman Family, and episode 3 an interview with Black Mask and Up Against the Wall founder Ben Morea: Part 1, Part 2 More info on the Altlanta Forest: https://defendtheatlantaforest.org/ Follow on Twitter and read their latests essays at Crimethic.com PDF: Jerry Rubin: Do It! Video: Ed Sanders on Firing Line Song: The Spectacle - I, Fail
Roanne Kantor tells us about World Literature, in the ideas and practices of readers, writers, and scholars. Spatial metaphors like libraries, closets, and airport bookshops, help her imagine the “world” in world literature. In the episode Roanne references work by many scholars in the field, including David Damrosch's What is World Literature (Princeton UP, 2003); Debjani Ganguly's This Thing Called the World (Duke UP, 2016), and Gloria Fisk's Orhan Pamuk and the Good of World Literature (Columbia UP, 2018). In the longer version of our conversation, we talked about how little magazines from the 1970s New York literary scene, like Ed Sanders' Fuck You: A Magazine of the Arts, circulated in South Asia, inspiring avant-garde magazines like Arvind Krishna Mehrotra's damn you/a magazine of the arts. Roanne is an assistant professor of English and Comparative Literature at Stanford University. She has a brand new book, South Asian Writers, Latin American Literature, and the Rise of Global English, (Cambridge UP, 2022). If you want to learn more about the world of world lit, check it out. This week's image of an airport bookshop at the Incheon International Airport in South Korea, was photographed by Adli Wahid and made publicly available on Wikimedia Commons under a Creative Commons License. Music used in promotional material: ‘Six More Weeks' by Evening Fires Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Roanne Kantor tells us about World Literature, in the ideas and practices of readers, writers, and scholars. Spatial metaphors like libraries, closets, and airport bookshops, help her imagine the “world” in world literature. In the episode Roanne references work by many scholars in the field, including David Damrosch's What is World Literature (Princeton UP, 2003); Debjani Ganguly's This Thing Called the World (Duke UP, 2016), and Gloria Fisk's Orhan Pamuk and the Good of World Literature (Columbia UP, 2018). In the longer version of our conversation, we talked about how little magazines from the 1970s New York literary scene, like Ed Sanders' Fuck You: A Magazine of the Arts, circulated in South Asia, inspiring avant-garde magazines like Arvind Krishna Mehrotra's damn you/a magazine of the arts. Roanne is an assistant professor of English and Comparative Literature at Stanford University. She has a brand new book, South Asian Writers, Latin American Literature, and the Rise of Global English, (Cambridge UP, 2022). If you want to learn more about the world of world lit, check it out. This week's image of an airport bookshop at the Incheon International Airport in South Korea, was photographed by Adli Wahid and made publicly available on Wikimedia Commons under a Creative Commons License. Music used in promotional material: ‘Six More Weeks' by Evening Fires Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Roanne Kantor tells us about World Literature, in the ideas and practices of readers, writers, and scholars. Spatial metaphors like libraries, closets, and airport bookshops, help her imagine the “world” in world literature. In the episode Roanne references work by many scholars in the field, including David Damrosch's What is World Literature (Princeton UP, 2003); Debjani Ganguly's This Thing Called the World (Duke UP, 2016), and Gloria Fisk's Orhan Pamuk and the Good of World Literature (Columbia UP, 2018). In the longer version of our conversation, we talked about how little magazines from the 1970s New York literary scene, like Ed Sanders' Fuck You: A Magazine of the Arts, circulated in South Asia, inspiring avant-garde magazines like Arvind Krishna Mehrotra's damn you/a magazine of the arts. Roanne is an assistant professor of English and Comparative Literature at Stanford University. She has a brand new book, South Asian Writers, Latin American Literature, and the Rise of Global English, (Cambridge UP, 2022). If you want to learn more about the world of world lit, check it out. This week's image of an airport bookshop at the Incheon International Airport in South Korea, was photographed by Adli Wahid and made publicly available on Wikimedia Commons under a Creative Commons License. Music used in promotional material: ‘Six More Weeks' by Evening Fires Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/literary-studies
Roanne Kantor tells us about World Literature, in the ideas and practices of readers, writers, and scholars. Spatial metaphors like libraries, closets, and airport bookshops, help her imagine the “world” in world literature. In the episode Roanne references work by many scholars in the field, including David Damrosch's What is World Literature (Princeton UP, 2003); Debjani Ganguly's This Thing Called the World (Duke UP, 2016), and Gloria Fisk's Orhan Pamuk and the Good of World Literature (Columbia UP, 2018). In the longer version of our conversation, we talked about how little magazines from the 1970s New York literary scene, like Ed Sanders' Fuck You: A Magazine of the Arts, circulated in South Asia, inspiring avant-garde magazines like Arvind Krishna Mehrotra's damn you/a magazine of the arts. Roanne is an assistant professor of English and Comparative Literature at Stanford University. She has a brand new book, South Asian Writers, Latin American Literature, and the Rise of Global English, (Cambridge UP, 2022). If you want to learn more about the world of world lit, check it out. This week's image of an airport bookshop at the Incheon International Airport in South Korea, was photographed by Adli Wahid and made publicly available on Wikimedia Commons under a Creative Commons License. Music used in promotional material: ‘Six More Weeks' by Evening Fires Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/world-affairs