
teaching about hate language
Several media reported on conflict at Princeton University about a course taught by Lawrence Rosen, professor emeritus of anthropology, on cultural freedoms and hate speech. His use of a racial slur during a class discussion prompted some students to walk out in protest. Rosen subsequently cancelled the course. According to The Guardian, colleagues say Rosen has often used the slur during lectures on free speech, and that this is the first time he has received such a negative response from students. The university issued a statement defending Rosen. Carolyn Rouse, chairwoman of Princeton’s anthropology department, who is black, wrote a letter to the editor of the Daily Princetonian defending Rosen’s use of the slur. By the end of the semester, she wrote, Rosen hoped his students would be able to argue why hate speech should or should not be protected using an argument other than “because it made me feel bad.”
architectural nostalgia in Tokyo
The Japan Times carried an article about nagaya, rowhouses, that have been disappearing from downtown Tokyo for many decades, torn down to make way for office blocks and more comfortable and profitable housing complexes. Nagaya first appeared in Tokyo during the Edo Period (1603-1868) as living quarters for the “common” class. Residents lived side by side in the long wooden buildings and shared a communal well, toilet, and waste disposal area. The article includes insight from Hidenobu Jinnai, anthropologist and architectural scholar, who has noted that an Inari shrine housed a protective deity providing “a spiritual bond for the denizens of the alleyway.”


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The Huffington Post 
