Essays

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Page 40
Who would Heidegger root for? (Drawing of Martin Heidegger by aeneastudio via Creative Commons/Flickr)

Heidegger and the Super Bowl

Thinking football

It might be possible to argue that Patriots head coach Bill Belichick is the Heidegger of football, if anyone could actually figure out what Belichick is thinking.
AJ Sabatini

AJ Sabatini

Essays 5 minute read
Mother and Twins Monument by Henry Dmochowski Saunders, commemorating his wife and children. The site overlooks the bend in the Schuylkill River where the twins drowned. (Photo by Smallbones via Creative Commons/Wikipedia)

The age of mothers

In the weeks after losing her mother, the author explores a pair of historic Philadelphia cemeteries.
Joanna Rotté

Joanna Rotté

Essays 5 minute read
An unindicted coconspirator? (photo by Frances Sonne via Creative Commons/Wikimedia)

"Justice" for Joe Paterno?

It was fair to reverse the disqualification of current players from bowl game eligibility: They played no part in the Sandusky scandal. It wasn’t fair to reverse the change in Paterno’s numbers: That was only a slap on the wrist for a powerful man who otherwise escaped punishment for the terrible things that happened on his watch.
Steve Cohen

Steve Cohen

Essays 4 minute read
How much "self" remains in someone with Alzheimer's? (Julianne Moore in "Still Alice")

Thoughts on aging

What lasts

The older I get, the more I realize that the “me” who looks out through my eyes has traits that have nothing to do with chronology. I may look ridiculous if I invest too heavily in the media version of beauty, but inner beauty is something I can take with me to my grave, even as the inevitable decline of the rest of me hastens on.
Maria Thompson Corley

Maria Thompson Corley

Essays 4 minute read
Whee! Wait — what? (photo of Malaysian schoolgirls by Cavernosa via Creative Commons/Wikimedia)

An alma mater's fundraising appeal

A walk down memory lane — too bad it wasn’t mine

My high school begs for money; this year, they decided to remind me (as if I needed reminding) of why I’m glad high school is over.

Tara Lynn Johnson

Essays 3 minute read

'Charlie Hebdo' and other bad news

News at 11

We are all people. We all share this planet and this trip. I do not know how to stop us from killing one another, but I have an idea about how to stop in those being terrorized the desire to bust down other people’s doors in retaliation.
Bob Levin

Bob Levin

Essays 3 minute read

Busting out of stereotypes

Sing, sang, sung

We all carry self-fulfilling stories, tapestries of what we’ve been told, where we’ve triumphed and where we’ve gone wrong. The stories can boost us, but just as easily they can halt us mid-step. They shut us up. They keep us on the tame side of creativity, of daring.
Anndee Hochman

Anndee Hochman

Essays 5 minute read
Christmas cards

On the sending of Christmas cards

Reflecting on the exchange of season's greetings — for more than 40 years in some cases.
Bob Levin

Bob Levin

Essays 3 minute read
Tatiana Maslany and Tatiana Maslany in "Orphan Black."

2014 highlights: An idiosyncratic list

Editor's choice

As editor of Broad Street Review, I'm often too busy to share my own cultural experiences and meditations about them. Here are some of the essays I didn’t write in 2014, presented as a "best of" list of recommendations, not actual analyses.
Judy Weightman

Judy Weightman

Essays 5 minute read
The latest accomplishment by small leaders: the Schuylkill Banks boardwalk. (photo via schuylkillbanks.org)

In praise of small leaders

A thought before the storm

A thought from the late Pete Seeger offers a useful guide for Americans as we approach the beginning of our presidential marathon.
Tom Purdom

Tom Purdom

Essays 3 minute read